Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 357
Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries
The Asante Kingdom of West Africa
The Asante kingdom, part of the larger Akan culture was formed around 1700 under the
leadership of Osei Tutu. Osei Tutu brought together a confederation of states that had grown
wealthy and powerful as a result of the area’s lucrative trade in gold, sold to both northern
merchants across the Sahara and European navigators. The centralized system of government
that emerged was a complex network of chiefs and court officials under a single paramount
leader. A variety of gold regalia was used to distinguish rank and position within the court.
Among the Asante (or Ashanti), a popular legend relates how two young men—Ota Karaban and
his friend Kwaku Ameyaw—learned the art of weaving by observing a spider weaving its web.
One night, the two went out into the forest to check their traps, and they were amazed by a
beautiful spider’s web whose many unique designs sparkled in the moonlight. The spider, named
Ananse, offered to show the men how to weave such designs in exchange for a few favors. After
completing the favors and learning how to weave the designs with a single thread, the men
returned home to Bonwire (the town in the Asante region of Ghana where kente weaving
originated), and their discovery was soon reported to Asantehene Osei Tutu. The asantehene
(title of the Asante monarch) adopted their creation, named kente, as a royal cloth reserved for
special occasions, and Bonwire became the leading kente weaving center for the asantehene
and his court.
Asantehene Osei Tutu II wearing kente cloth, 2005 (photo: Retlaw Snellac, CC BY 2.0)
https://flic.kr/p/AQ7df
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 358
Originally, the use of kente was reserved for Asante royalty and limited to special social and
sacred functions. Even as production has increased and kente has become more accessible to
those outside the royal court, it continues to be associated with wealth, high social status, and
cultural sophistication. Kente is also found in Asante shrines to the deities, or abosom, as a mark
of their spiritual power.
Patterns each have a name, as does each cloth in its entirety. Names can be inspired by
historical events, proverbs, philosophical concepts, oral literature, moral values, human and
animal behavior, individual achievements, or even individuals in pop culture. In the past, when
purchasing a cloth, the aesthetic and social appeal of the cloth’s was as important as—or
sometimes even more important than—its visual pattern or color.
The King has Boarded the Ship (Asante kente cloth), c. 1985, rayon (collection of Dr. Courtnay Micots)
This cloth is named The King Has Boarded the Ship, and it includes both warp and weft patterns.
The warp pattern, consisting of two multicolor stripes on blue, relates to the prover ...
The document discusses how art and politics are closely intertwined, using examples from Roman emperor Augustus and modern politicians. It explains how Augustus used portraits like the Augustus of Primaporta sculpture to communicate his ideology and vision of the Pax Romana. Similarly, modern politicians carefully craft their public images to convey their agendas.
Modernism in Art: An Introduction: Salon des refusesJames Clegg
This course provides a critical introduction to modernist artistic movements starting from the Salon des Refusés in 1863. It examines Impressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, Dada and other avant-garde styles in their historical and cultural contexts. The course structure includes 11 weeks covering these movements and their influence in reshaping representations of the modern world.
The document discusses the intellectual and philosophical movement known as the Enlightenment. Key ideas of the Enlightenment included replacing religion with reason and science, questioning traditional values and authority, and prioritizing individual liberty and equality. These ideas influenced the American and French Revolutions in challenging absolute monarchy and divine rights of kings. Enlightenment philosophers advocated for separation of church and state, freedom of religion and speech, and that government derives power from the people rather than a divine ruler. The document traces how the Enlightenment marked a transition from the old world order to a new era of democracy, reason, and humanism.
The document discusses the rise of Neoclassicism during the Enlightenment period. Neoclassicism rejected the ornate styles that came before it in favor of a simpler, more rational style inspired by classical antiquity. Artists like Jacques-Louis David created works depicting stories of virtue from Greek and Roman history that promoted Enlightenment ideals of patriotism and civic duty. While Neoclassicism intended to educate through moral examples, the French Revolution it helped inspire descended into violence and terror rather than the noble republic envisioned in its classical references.
This document provides definitions for various art-related terms organized alphabetically. It describes styles, periods, and genres of art from different cultures around the world, including aboriginal, abstraction, African, American, ancient, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Asian, avant-garde, Baroque, Buddhist, classical, contemporary, Cubism, Egyptian, Expressionism, folk, Futurism, Gothic, Graffiti, Greek, Gupta, Han, Heian, Hindu, Impressionism, Islamic, Mannerism, Medieval, Ming, Minimalism, modern, and Momoyama art. Each entry briefly explains the characteristics and origins of the term.
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101) - Dr.docxLeilaniPoolsy
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101) - Dr. Serena Autiero
Page 1 of 4
Princess Nora bint Abdul Rahman University
College of Fine Arts and Design - Art History Department
Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101)
Instructor: Dr. Serena Autiero
Reading 1 for Final Paper
ART THROUGH THE AGES
1. The Beginnings of Art
Art history, which begins around 30,000 B.C. with the earliest known cave paintings,
predates writing by about 26,500 years! That makes art history even older than history,
which begins with the birth of script around 3500 B.C. Along with archaeology, art
history is one of our primary windows into prehistory (everything before 3500 B.C.).
Cave paintings, prehistoric sculpture, and architecture together paint a vivid — although
incomplete — picture of Stone Age and Bronze Age life. Without art history, we would
know a lot less about our early ancestors.
With the beginning of history with the invention of script around 3500 B.C. the need for
art is still felt by humanity. And studying that art is still very important to understand the
past, since history is the diary of the past; this means that ancient peoples wrote about
themselves, so that we know their own interpretation of facts, not things as they were. Art
history is instead the mirror of the past. It shows us who we were, instead of telling us, as
history does. History is the study of wars and conquests, mass migrations, and political
and social experiments. Art history is a portrait of man’s inner life: his aspirations and
inspirations, his hopes and fears, his spirituality and sense of self.
2. The Great Ancient Civilizations
If we know who we were 10,000 years ago, we have a better sense of who we are today.
Even studying a few Ancient Greek vases can reveal a lot about modern society — if you
know how to look at and read the vases. Many Greek vases show us what ancient Greek
theater looked like; modern theater and cinema are the direct descendants of Greek
theater. Greek vases depict early musical instruments, dancers dancing, and athletes
competing in the ancient Olympics, the forerunner of the modern Olympic Games. Some
vases show us the role of women and men: Women carry vases called hydrias; men paint
those vases. Ancient art teaches us about past religions (which still affect our modern
religions) and the horrors of ancient war craft. Rameses II’s monument celebrating his
battle against the Hittites and Trajan’s Column, which depicts the Emperor Trajan’s
conquest of Dacia (modern day Romania), are enduring eyewitness accounts of ancient
battles that shaped nations and determined the languages we speak today. Art isn’t just
limited to paintings and sculptures. Architecture, another form of art, reveals the way
men and women responded to and survived in their environment, as well as how they
defined and defended themselves.
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101.
801.a crash course in the 20th century art a guide to understanding and enjoy...ivanov1566334322
This document appears to be an instruction manual or guidebook about modern art movements in the 20th century. It covers several major art movements in chronological order, including Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism, Expressionism, Abstract Art, Dada, Surrealism, Op Art and Pop Art. Each section provides background on the movement, examples of key artists, and exercises or activities for understanding and interacting with works from that movement. The document aims to give readers a crash course in modern art to help them better understand and engage with modern and contemporary art.
ImpressionismImpression Sunrise 1874, Claude Monet.Ab.docxwilcockiris
This document provides an overview of the key concepts and learning objectives for a module on Impressionism. It discusses that students will explore the historical and social contexts surrounding Impressionist art, examine the ideals and values of the Impressionist period, and look closely at Impressionist artworks. The module will include a discussion board and quiz to assess student learning. Students are instructed to take notes on vocabulary terms and concepts throughout the module to prepare for these assessments.
The document discusses how art and politics are closely intertwined, using examples from Roman emperor Augustus and modern politicians. It explains how Augustus used portraits like the Augustus of Primaporta sculpture to communicate his ideology and vision of the Pax Romana. Similarly, modern politicians carefully craft their public images to convey their agendas.
Modernism in Art: An Introduction: Salon des refusesJames Clegg
This course provides a critical introduction to modernist artistic movements starting from the Salon des Refusés in 1863. It examines Impressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Constructivism, Dada and other avant-garde styles in their historical and cultural contexts. The course structure includes 11 weeks covering these movements and their influence in reshaping representations of the modern world.
The document discusses the intellectual and philosophical movement known as the Enlightenment. Key ideas of the Enlightenment included replacing religion with reason and science, questioning traditional values and authority, and prioritizing individual liberty and equality. These ideas influenced the American and French Revolutions in challenging absolute monarchy and divine rights of kings. Enlightenment philosophers advocated for separation of church and state, freedom of religion and speech, and that government derives power from the people rather than a divine ruler. The document traces how the Enlightenment marked a transition from the old world order to a new era of democracy, reason, and humanism.
The document discusses the rise of Neoclassicism during the Enlightenment period. Neoclassicism rejected the ornate styles that came before it in favor of a simpler, more rational style inspired by classical antiquity. Artists like Jacques-Louis David created works depicting stories of virtue from Greek and Roman history that promoted Enlightenment ideals of patriotism and civic duty. While Neoclassicism intended to educate through moral examples, the French Revolution it helped inspire descended into violence and terror rather than the noble republic envisioned in its classical references.
This document provides definitions for various art-related terms organized alphabetically. It describes styles, periods, and genres of art from different cultures around the world, including aboriginal, abstraction, African, American, ancient, Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Asian, avant-garde, Baroque, Buddhist, classical, contemporary, Cubism, Egyptian, Expressionism, folk, Futurism, Gothic, Graffiti, Greek, Gupta, Han, Heian, Hindu, Impressionism, Islamic, Mannerism, Medieval, Ming, Minimalism, modern, and Momoyama art. Each entry briefly explains the characteristics and origins of the term.
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101) - Dr.docxLeilaniPoolsy
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101) - Dr. Serena Autiero
Page 1 of 4
Princess Nora bint Abdul Rahman University
College of Fine Arts and Design - Art History Department
Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101)
Instructor: Dr. Serena Autiero
Reading 1 for Final Paper
ART THROUGH THE AGES
1. The Beginnings of Art
Art history, which begins around 30,000 B.C. with the earliest known cave paintings,
predates writing by about 26,500 years! That makes art history even older than history,
which begins with the birth of script around 3500 B.C. Along with archaeology, art
history is one of our primary windows into prehistory (everything before 3500 B.C.).
Cave paintings, prehistoric sculpture, and architecture together paint a vivid — although
incomplete — picture of Stone Age and Bronze Age life. Without art history, we would
know a lot less about our early ancestors.
With the beginning of history with the invention of script around 3500 B.C. the need for
art is still felt by humanity. And studying that art is still very important to understand the
past, since history is the diary of the past; this means that ancient peoples wrote about
themselves, so that we know their own interpretation of facts, not things as they were. Art
history is instead the mirror of the past. It shows us who we were, instead of telling us, as
history does. History is the study of wars and conquests, mass migrations, and political
and social experiments. Art history is a portrait of man’s inner life: his aspirations and
inspirations, his hopes and fears, his spirituality and sense of self.
2. The Great Ancient Civilizations
If we know who we were 10,000 years ago, we have a better sense of who we are today.
Even studying a few Ancient Greek vases can reveal a lot about modern society — if you
know how to look at and read the vases. Many Greek vases show us what ancient Greek
theater looked like; modern theater and cinema are the direct descendants of Greek
theater. Greek vases depict early musical instruments, dancers dancing, and athletes
competing in the ancient Olympics, the forerunner of the modern Olympic Games. Some
vases show us the role of women and men: Women carry vases called hydrias; men paint
those vases. Ancient art teaches us about past religions (which still affect our modern
religions) and the horrors of ancient war craft. Rameses II’s monument celebrating his
battle against the Hittites and Trajan’s Column, which depicts the Emperor Trajan’s
conquest of Dacia (modern day Romania), are enduring eyewitness accounts of ancient
battles that shaped nations and determined the languages we speak today. Art isn’t just
limited to paintings and sculptures. Architecture, another form of art, reveals the way
men and women responded to and survived in their environment, as well as how they
defined and defended themselves.
PNU – CAD, Course of English for Art and Design (ARH 101.
801.a crash course in the 20th century art a guide to understanding and enjoy...ivanov1566334322
This document appears to be an instruction manual or guidebook about modern art movements in the 20th century. It covers several major art movements in chronological order, including Impressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Futurism, Expressionism, Abstract Art, Dada, Surrealism, Op Art and Pop Art. Each section provides background on the movement, examples of key artists, and exercises or activities for understanding and interacting with works from that movement. The document aims to give readers a crash course in modern art to help them better understand and engage with modern and contemporary art.
ImpressionismImpression Sunrise 1874, Claude Monet.Ab.docxwilcockiris
This document provides an overview of the key concepts and learning objectives for a module on Impressionism. It discusses that students will explore the historical and social contexts surrounding Impressionist art, examine the ideals and values of the Impressionist period, and look closely at Impressionist artworks. The module will include a discussion board and quiz to assess student learning. Students are instructed to take notes on vocabulary terms and concepts throughout the module to prepare for these assessments.
Please readRobert Geraci, Russia Minorities and Empire,” in .docxTatianaMajor22
Please read:
Robert Geraci, “Russia: Minorities and Empire,” in Abbott Gleason, ed., A Companion to Russian History (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), 243-260.
And discuss:
How does Geraci portray the legacy of the early Russian history for the make-up of 18-19th century Russia?
Please read: Leonard Victor Rutgers, “Roman Policy Towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century C.E.,” in Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74.
And discuss: Rutgers surveys the different reasons historians have given for the expulsion of the Jews from Rome in the first century C.E. Who place did Jews have in Roman society at this time? Were they expelled because of their religious practices, or because they were ‘unruly’ as Rutgers argues? If so, what caused them to act in this way? What kind of historical evidence does the author use?
There are 2 essay, each one should write at least 300-350 words and plus one reference page.
MLA format. Must use quote( “ ”) for every source you use from website. And put (author, page number) behind quote.
Roman Policy towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century
C.E.
Author(s): Leonard Victor Rutgers
Source: Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74
Published by: University of California Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005 .
Accessed: 26/08/2011 13:35
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Classical
Antiquity.
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http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005?origin=JSTOR-pdf
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
LEONARD VICTOR RUTGERS
Roman Policy towards the Jews:
Expulsions from the City of Rome
during the First Century c. E.
Tant de causes secretes se melent souvent a la cause apparente, tant de ressorts
inconnus servent a persecuter un homme, qu'il est impossible de demeler dans les
siecles posterieures la source cachee des malheurs des hommes les plus consider
ables, a plus forte raison celle du supplice d'un particulier qui ne pouvait etre
connu que par ceux de son parti.
-Voltaire, Traite sur la tolerance (1763)
IN THIS ARTICLE I want to discuss the evidence for expulsions of Jews from
the city of Rome in the first century C.E. Scholars have long been interested in the
reasons underlying these expulsions. Because the anci.
Ford VS ChevroletThere are many reasons that make the Chevy.docxTatianaMajor22
Ford VS Chevrolet
There are many reasons that make the Chevy’s and Ford’s motors two most common trucks. Studies reveal that that they are the most popular vehicles on sales today. It is because they are powerful, versatile and reasonably priced. They also come in a wide variety of configurations and styles. However, many buyers and sellers have questioned themselves on the better vehicle compared to the other in terms of quality, Wi-Fi, price ranges, value, and costs. To compare and contrast on this subject, let us take an example of two vehicles each from each company to facilitate comparison.
Ford offers the full-size track with automatic high-beam control, automatic parallel parking and power-retractable running boards. Fords are elegant, and they are mostly aluminum making them save weight and bolster gas mileage. None of these features are offered Chevy’s. Chevrolets have outstanding quality. They are mostly comprised of steel, for instance, the Chevrolet Silverado. This makes them good for rough roads and difficult terrains.
Fords have employed the use of up to date Wi-Fi technology. Ford intends to provide the Ford Sync, which will provide robust connections for occupants. Latest Chevrolet brands Malibu utilize the 4G LTE Wi-Fi Technology that provides rich in-vehicle experiences. This technology is powerful compared to Ford Sync, and is used for connecting devices and executing few remote operations within the car.
From the value and cost standpoint, Ford can consume a little more, and its payload capacity is a little higher. Additionally, its mileage is too better. The prices vary from nation to nation. Chevrolet seems to be a little cheaper, and reasonably priced going for $33,044, which is slightly less than Ford, but the differences are not serious to propel buyers towards one truck leaving the other
Technophiles are likely to put their preferences on Ford to Chevrolet. On overall, Fords have many features as compared Chevy’s. However, they may be hard to maintain. Compared to Fords, Chevrolets are reliable and cheaper. However, the two brands are equally good performers. It is, therefore, prudent to pick what one thinks would fit his or her usage and preference and personal style
Ethical Systems, Research Paper, Spring 2015, Douglas Green, Page 1 of 1
Ethical
Systems/Final
Research
Paper
2,000
words
minimum,
double-‐spaced
Final
Draft
Due:
Tuesday,
April
28,
12:00
pm
(afternoon)
Please
email
your
final
research
paper
to
me
via
MS
Word
attachment
AND
by
cutting/pasting
the
entire
document
into
the
body
of
your
email.
IF
YOU
DO
NOT
RECEIVE
A
CONFIRMATION
EMAIL
BACK,
I
DID
NOT
RECEIVE
YOUR
ESSAY
AND
YOU
WILL
LOSE
ALL
CREDIT
FOR
THIS
REQUIREMENT.
NO
LATE
WORK
WILL
BE
ACCEPTED…
PERIOD!
.
Fairness and Discipline Weve all been disciplined at one.docxTatianaMajor22
Fairness and Discipline
We've all been disciplined at one time or another by a parent or a teacher. What disciplinary experiences have you had as a child that took a non-punitive approach?
I need paragraph or half page with reference
.
Appendix 12A Statement of Cash Flows—Direct MethodLEARNING .docxTatianaMajor22
Appendix 12A
Statement of Cash Flows—Direct Method
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
6
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the direct method.
To explain and illustrate the direct method, we will use the transactions of Computer Services Company for 2014, to prepare a statement of cash flows. Illustration 12A-1 presents information related to 2014 for Computer Services Company.
To prepare a statement of cash flows under the direct approach, we will apply the three steps outlined in Illustration 12-4.
Illustration 12A-1
Comparative balance sheets, income statement, and additional information for Computer Services Company
STEP 1: OPERATING ACTIVITIES
DETERMINE NET CASH PROVIDED/USED BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES BY CONVERTING NET INCOME FROM AN ACCRUAL BASIS TO A CASH BASIS
Under the direct method, companies compute net cash provided by operating activities by adjusting each item in the income statement from the accrual basis to the cash basis. To simplify and condense the operating activities section, companies report only major classes of operating cash receipts and cash payments. For these major classes, the difference between cash receipts and cash payments is the net cash provided by operating activities. These relationships are as shown in Illustration 12A-2.
Illustration 12A-2
Major classes of cash receipts and payments
An efficient way to apply the direct method is to analyze the items reported in the income statement in the order in which they are listed. We then determine cash receipts and cash payments related to these revenues and expenses. The following pages present the adjustments required to prepare a statement of cash flows for Computer Services Company using the direct approach.
CASH RECEIPTS FROM CUSTOMERS.
The income statement for Computer Services Company reported sales revenue from customers of $507,000. How much of that was cash receipts? To answer that, companies need to consider the change in accounts receivable during the year. When accounts receivable increase during the year, revenues on an accrual basis are higher than cash receipts from customers. Operations led to revenues, but not all of these revenues resulted in cash receipts.
To determine the amount of cash receipts, the company deducts from sales revenue the increase in accounts receivable. On the other hand, there may be a decrease in accounts receivable. That would occur if cash receipts from customers exceeded sales revenue. In that case, the company adds to sales revenue the decrease in accounts receivable. For Computer Services Company, accounts receivable decreased $10,000. Thus, cash receipts from customers were $517,000, computed as shown in Illustration 12A-3.
Illustration 12A-3
Computation of cash receipts from customers
Computer Services can also determine cash receipts from customers from an analysis of the Accounts Receivable account, as shown in Illustration 12A-4.
Illustration 12A-4
Analysis of Accounts Receivable
Illustration.
Effects of StressProvide a 1-page description of a stressful .docxTatianaMajor22
Effects of Stress
Provide a 1-page description of a stressful event currently occurring in your life.
Discuss I am married work a full time job as an occupational therapy assistant am taking two courses
Have to take care of a home feed the animals attend to laundry
Think of my pateitns worry about their well being and what I can do for them ( I bring home my patients issues)
Constantly doing paper work for work such as documentation for billing
I feel like I have no free time for me some days I don’t even eat dinner or lunch because I don’t have time to make anything or am just too tired to cook
On top of this I am married and married ppl do argue and my husband am I have been bunting heads on finances.
Then, referring to information you learned throughout this course, address the following:
· What physiological changes occur in the brain due to the stress response?
· What emotional and cognitive effects might occur due to this stressful situation?
· Would the above changes (physiological, cognitive, or emotional) be any different if the same stress were being experienced by a person of the opposite sex or someone much older or younger than you?
· If the situation continues, how might your physical health be affected?
· What three behavioral strategies would you implement to reduce the effects of this stressor? Describe each strategy. Explain how each behavior could cause changes in brain physiology (e.g., exercise can raise serotonin levels).
· If you were encouraging an adult client to make the above changes, what ethical considerations would you have to keep in mind? How would you address those ethical considerations?
In addition to citing the online course and the text, you are also required to cite a minimum of four scholarly sources. For reputable web sources, look for .gov or .edu sites as opposed to .com sites. Please do not use Wikipedia.
Your paper should be double-spaced, in 12-point Times New Roman font, and with normal 1-inch margins; written in APA style; and free of typographical and grammatical errors. It should include a title page with a running head, an abstract, and a reference page.
The body of the paper should be at least 6 pages in length total
not including the reference or title page
Assignment 1 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Described a stressful event.
20
Explained the physiological changes that occur in the brain due to the stress response.
36
Explained the emotional and cognitive effects that may occur due to this stressful situation.
32
Analyzed potential differences in physiological, cognitive, and emotional responses in someone of a different age or sex.
32
Discussed the physical health risks.
28
Provided three behavioral strategies to reduce the effects of the stressor and explained how each could cause changes in brain physiology.
40
Analyzed ethical considerations in implementing behavioral strategies and offered suggestions for addressing these.
40
Integrated at least two scholarly references .
Design Factors NotesCIO’s Office 5 People IT Chief’s Offi.docxTatianaMajor22
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Standard floor (first floor) Lesson 2 Project Plan info
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Basement floor
Design Factors
Notes
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cisco Catalyst: Switch: WS-C3750G-24PS-S: 24 Ports
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Color Laser Printer
Minimum of One per Room or One per 20 people
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor and Server RM B on this floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Horizontal Runs
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Applicataion
U.S. Minimum Requirement Ranges
Space per Employee - 1997
Two people, such as a supervisor and an employee, can meet in an office with a table or desk between them
60" to 72" x 90" to 126:/5.78m2 to 11.7m2
280Sq. Ft./26.0m2
Worker has a primary desk plus a return
60" to 72"x60"to 84"/5.78 to 7.8m2
193Sq. Ft./17.9m2
Executive office - three to four people can meet around a desk
105 to 130"x96 to 123"/9.75 to 11.4 m2
142Sq. Ft./13.2m2
Basic workstation such as a call center
42" to 52" x 60" to 72"/3.9 to 6.7 m2
114Sq. Ft./10.6 m2
NT1310: Project
Page 1
PRO JECT D ESC RIPT ION
As the project manager for the Cable Planning team, you will manage the creation of the cable plan for
the new building that will be built, with construction set to begin in six weeks.
The deliverables for the entire Cable Plan will consist of an Executive Summary, a PowerPoint
Presentation and an Excel Spreadsheet. You will develop different parts of each of these in three parts.
The final organization should contain these elements:
The Executive Summary:
o Project Introduction
o Standards and Codes
Cable Standards and Codes
Building Standards and Codes
o Project Materials
o Copper Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Design Considerations
o Basement Server Comp.
Question 12.5 pointsSaveThe OSU studies concluded that le.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains questions about leadership, motivation, communication, groups/teams, and decision making. The questions assess knowledge of topics like situational leadership theory, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, organizational communication barriers, stages of team development, and group decision making techniques like brainstorming.
Case Study 1 Questions1. What is the allocated budget .docxTatianaMajor22
Case Study 1 Questions:
1. What is the allocated budget ? $250,000
2. Where does the server room located? Currently, there is no server room
3. What is the number of users with PCs inside each existing site?
Currently there are
4. What is the current cabling used in each location? (cat5e or cat6) Current cabling does not meet the company’s current and future needs
5. Do want us to upgrade token Ring or use a completely new Ethernet network What is your recommendation and why?
6. regarding the ordering system , it is not clear what the we should do , do you want to talk about how to connect the system to the network or how to built the ordering online system because it is more software engineering than networking . Talk about the kind of network (hardware) you recommend based on the business requirements
7. all the sites should have access to our servers in the main branch? yes
8. Regarding the order software, do you need more details about the way it works or just about its connection with the network? Your solution should be from a network point of view
9. Distances are given in Meters or feet? feet
10. Shipment is done by truck, or ships? Currently, only trucking
11. In Dimebox branch, where are administration offices located? See Business goals # 4
12. What is the current network connectivity status? How many devices are currently on the network? How they are physically laid out? Is cabling running all over the floor, hidden in walls or threaded through the ceiling? What are the switches used and its speed? Currently, only the office is networked (token ring) NOVELL
13. What is the minimum Internet speed wanted? See Business Goals on page 2 – I only can tell you what we need the network for, you must tell me what we need to meet the business needs
14. Will the corporation provide wireless access? If yes will it be in all department and buildings? Wireless access would be helpful if we can justify the cost
15. Are there phones in offices? yes
16. What is the internet speed available now? What speed do you want for future? Internet access is through time warner cable company which is not very reliable
17. Do employees access their emails outside the company? yes
18. Do you have plans for future expansion? We like to increase our customer base by 20% over the next year
REMEMBER, you are the IT expert, I’m only a business person who must rely on your expertise.
Network Design and Performance
Case Study
Dooma-Flochies, Inc. with headquarters located on Podunk Road in Trumansburg, NY, is the sole manufacturer of Dooma-Flochies (big surprise). They currently have a manufacturing facility in, Lake Ridge, NY (across Cayuga Lake) on Cayuga Dr. and have recently diversified by purchasing a company, This-N-That, on Industry Ave. in, Dime Box Texas. This-N-That is the sole competitor of Domma-Flochies with their product Thinga-Ma-Jigs. This acquisition gives Dooma-Flochies, Inc a monopoly in this mark.
Behavior in OrganizationsIntercultural Communications Exercise .docxTatianaMajor22
Behavior in Organizations
Intercultural Communications Exercise Response Paper –
Week 5
The most overt cultural differences, such as greeting rituals and name format, can be overcome most easily. The underlying, intangible differences are very difficult to overcome. In this case, the underlying cultural differences are
· Assumptions about the purpose of the event (is the party strictly for fun and for relationship building, or are their business matters to take care of?).
· Assumptions about the purpose and the nature of business relationship.
· Assumptions about power and leadership relationships (who makes the decisions and how?).
· Response styles (verbal and nonverbal signals of agreement, disagreement, politeness, etc.).
Many (though not all) cultural differences can be overcome if you carefully observe other people, think creatively, remain flexible, and remember that your own culture is not inherently superior to others.
The Scenario
Three corporations are planning a joint venture to sponsor an international concert tour. The corporations are Decibel, an agency representing the musicians (from the US, Britain, and Japan); Images, a marketing firm which will handle sales of tickets, snacks and beverages, clothing, and CDs; and Event, a special events company which will hire the ushers, concessionaires, and security officers; print the programs; and clean up the arenas after the shows. The companies come from three different cultures: Blue, Green, and Red. Each has specific cultural traits, customs, and practices.
You are a manager in one of these companies. You will attend the opening cocktail party in Perth, Australia the evening before a 3-day meeting during which the three companies will negotiate the details of the partnership. Your management team includes a Vice President and a number of other managers.
During the 3-day meeting, the companies have the following goals:
Decibel
· As high a royalty rate as possible on sales of T-shirts, videos, and CDs
· Aggressive marketing and advertising to increase attendance and sales
· Good security, both before and during the show Image
Image
· Well known bands that will be easy to market
· As much income as possible from the concerts
· Smoothly functioning event so that publicity from early concerts is positive
Event
· Bands that are not likely to provoke stampedes, riots, or other antisocial behavior
· Bands that are reliable and will show up on time, ready to play
· As much income as possible from the concerts
The cultures that are assigned to the various companies are:
BLUE CULTURE
Image (Marketing Company)
Beliefs, Values, and Attitudes that Underlie This Culture’s Communication
Believe that fate and luck control most things.
Believe in feelings more than reasoning.
An authoritarian leader makes the ultimate decisions.
Nonverbal Traits of This Culture
Treat time as something that is unimportant. It is not a commodity that can be lost.
Conversation distance is close (about 15 inches, face-.
Discussion Question Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disord.docxTatianaMajor22
Discussion Question:
Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disorders
There are numerous theories that attempt to explain the development and manifestation of psychological disorders. Some researchers hold that certain disorders result from learned behaviors (behavioral theory), while other researchers believe that there is a genetic or biological basis to psychological disorders (medical model), while still others hold that psychological disorders stem from unresolved unconscious conflict (psychoanalytic theory). How would each of these theoretical viewpoints explain anxiety disorders? Does one explain the development and manifestation of anxiety disorders better than the others?
200- 400 words please
Three min resources with
in text citations and examples
you can use the following as a module reference
cite as university 2014
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders such as panic disorder, specific phobias, and social anxiety disorder feature a heightened autonomic nervous system response that is above and beyond what would be considered normal when faced with the object or situation that the person reacts to. For example, a person with a specific phobia of spiders (called arachnophobia) experiences a heightened autonomic response when confronted with a spider (or even an image of a spider). This anxiety response must result in significant distress or impairment. In general, anxiety disorders have been linked to underactive gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the brain, resulting in overexcitability of the amygdala and the anterior cingulate cortex. Additionally, genetic research shows that anxiety disorders demonstrate a clear pattern of genetic predisposition
Charles Darwin's Perspective
We talked about Charles Darwin when discussing evolution and natural selection. Darwin was also very interested in emotions. One of his books published in 1872,The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, was devoted to this topic.
Darwin believed that emotions play an important role in the survival of the species and result from evolutionary processes in the same way as other behaviors and psychological functions. Darwin's writing on this topic also prompted psychologists to study animal behavior as a way to better understand human behavior.
James–Lange Theory of Emotions
Modern theories of emotion can be traced to William James and Carl Lange (Pinel, 2011). William James was a renowned Harvard psychologist who is sometimes called the father of American psychology. Carl Lange was a Danish physician. James and Lange formulated the same theory of emotions independently at about the same time (1884). As a result, it is called the James–Lange theory of emotions. This theory reversed the commonsensical notion that emotions are automatic responses to events around us. Instead, it proposes that emotions are the brain's interpretation of physiological responses to emotionally provocative stimuli.
Cannon–Bard Theory of Emotions
In 1915, Harvard physiologist Walt.
I have always liked Dustin Hoffmans style of acting, in this mov.docxTatianaMajor22
I have always liked Dustin Hoffman's style of acting, in this movie he takes on a sexually deprived young male just out of college, and has never been with a female, and is duped by horny older woman that feels neglected. Dustin Hoffman takes the characters form of a young male, goofy, respectful virgin and intelligent male, missing something but not really sure at the beginning till Ann Bancroft coaxes him with seduction to fulfill her own needs. In an other movie called "The life of Little Big Man" he plays almost the same character but as a white child raised by the Native Americans and a wise old chief that deeply care and loves him as his own, and Fay Dunaway plays a Holy rollers wife that is older and sexually deprived and feeling neglected by her husband and also she goes through major changes in her life from devoted wife, to a honey bell/ house hooker, whats funny Dustin Hoffman is a awesome actor but has to have his surrounding characters bring his character to life. The Graduate was Dustin Hoffman's first big movie of his career.
I actually liked movie "Little Big man" way better due to he went through major changes in his life, from being a Native boy warrior, captured by Yankees, meets Fay Dunaway who loves to give baths, to finding his sister who teaches him to be a gunslinger and then returns to his Grand Father to be a native again and tells his blind Grand Father the world of the white man is a crazy one, then his see the Psyho Col. Custer and gets his revenge by telling Custer the truth. The movie Little Big Man makes you laugh, teaches you things about people and survial and cry at times... its a must see...
Although a stray away from the Benjamin Braddock written about in the novel The Graduate, Dustin Hoffman does an awesome job with this character on film. When you first meet Ben he is at a party that his parents are throwing in his academic honor upon his graduation from school and return home. The whole night, Hoffman stumbles though various conversations and tries to coyly escape from the festivities. Small things such as this Hoffman did a great job at, conveying the hesitance and crisis that Ben was going through as a graduate. There are multiple times in the movie he hardly expresses anything at all, yet it clearly shows you that Ben is having a very hard time internally with everything going on. Even through his relationships with Mrs. Robinson and her daughter Elaine you see the young man struggling with himself through either failed attempts at affection or lack thereof.
.
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior Wh.docxTatianaMajor22
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior? Why, or why not? Support your answer with at least three reasons that justify your position.
100 words
Discuss the differences between an attitude and a behavior. Provide 4 substantive reasons why it is important for organizations to monitor and mitigate employee behavior that is either beneficial or detrimental to the organization's goals and existence.
150 words
.
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please clic.docxTatianaMajor22
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please click "View in Browser." V BUS 520Week 9 Assignment 4 Paper
I need the paper as soon as possible
Students, please view the "Submit a Clickable Rubric Assignment" in the Student Center.
Instructors, training on how to grade is within the Instructor Center.
Assignment 4: Leadership Style: What Do People Do When They Are Leading?
Due Week 9 and worth 100 points
Choose one (1) of the following CEOs for this assignment: Larry Page (Google), Tony Hsieh (Zappos), Gary Kelly (Southwest Airlines), Meg Whitman (Hewlett Packard), Ursula Burns (Xerox), Terri Kelly (W.L. Gore), Ellen Kullman (DuPont), or Bob McDonald (Procter & Gamble). Use the Internet to investigate the leadership style and effectiveness of the selected CEO. (Note: Just choose one that is easier for you to right about.) It does not matter to me which CEO you pick
Write a five to six (5-6) page paper in which you:
1. Provide a brief (one [1] paragraph) background of the CEO.
2. Analyze the CEO’s leadership style and philosophy, and how the CEO’s leadership style aligns with the culture.
3. Examine the CEO’s personal and organizational values.
4. Evaluate how the values of the CEO are likely to influence ethical behavior within the organization.
5. Determine the CEO’s three (3) greatest strengths and three (3) greatest weaknesses.
6. Select the quality that you believe contributes most to this leader’s success. Support your reasoning.
7. Assess how communication and collaboration, and power and politics influence group (i.e., the organization’s) dynamics.
8. Use at least five (5) quality academic resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
· Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
· Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
· Analyze the formation and dynamics of group behavior and work teams, including the application of power in groups.
· Outline various individual and group decision-making processes and key factors affecting these processes.
· Examine the primary conflict levels within organization and the process for negotiating resolutions.
· Examine how power and influence empower and affect office politics, political interpretations, and political behavior.
· Use technology and information resources to research issues in organizational behavior.
· Write clearly and concisely about organizational behavior using proper writing mechanics.
Click here.
Is the proliferation of social media and communication devices a .docxTatianaMajor22
Social media and communication devices have both benefits and drawbacks for society. While they allow easy connection with others and access to information, overuse can negatively impact relationships and mental health. Overall, moderation is key to reap the upsides of technology while avoiding the downsides.
MATH 107 FINAL EXAMINATIONMULTIPLE CHOICE1. Deter.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains a 30-question math exam covering topics like functions, graphs, equations, inequalities, logarithms, and other math concepts. It includes multiple choice, short answer, and show work questions assessing skills like domain and range, solving equations, graphing, composites, inverses, lines, maximizing profit, and more. Students must demonstrate mathematical reasoning and problem-solving abilities.
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring.docxTatianaMajor22
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Is there a lack of information on strategic planning? Nope. I think the process of planning is poorly understood, and rarely endorsed. The reasons are simple enough. Planning requires a commitment of resources (time, talent, money); it requires insight; it requires a total immersion in the corporate culture. While organizations do plan, planning is invariably attached to the budget process. It is typically here that the CIO lays out his/her vision for the coming year Now a few years ago authors began writing on the value of aligning IT purpose to organizational purpose. They wrote at a time when enterprise architectural planning was fairly new, and enterprise resource management was on the lips of every executive. My view is that alignment is a natural process driven by the availability of the tools to accomplish it. Twenty years ago making sense of IT was more about processing power, and database management. We are in a new age of IT, and it is the computer that is the network, not the network as an independent self-contained exchange of information. If you will spend some time reviewing the basic materials I provided on strategic planning and alignment, we can begin our discussions for the course. Again, here is the problem I would like for us to tackle: If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Most of the articles I bundled together for this week are replete with tables and charts. These can be a heavy read. Your approach should be to review these articles for the "big ideas" or lessons that are take away. I think these studies are significant enough that we will conclude our first week with an understanding of the roles between executive leaders, and how they see Information Technology playing a role in shaping a business strategy.
Read the articles to answer the question. Please No Plagerism or verbatim but you are allowed to quote from the article.
Achieving and Sustaining
Business-IT Alignment
Jerry Luftman
Tom Brier
I
n recent decades, billions of dollars have been invested in intormation tech-
nology (IT). A key concern of business executives is alignment—applying IT
in an appropriate and timely way and in harmony with business strategies,
goals, and needs. This issue addresses both how IT is aligned with the busi-
ness and how the business should be aligned with IT Frustratingly, organizations
seem to find it difficult or impossible to harness the power of information tech-
nology for their own long-term benefit, even though there is worldwide evi-
dence that IT has the power to transform whole industries and markets.' How
can companies.
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs .docxTatianaMajor22
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs/ contribution margin.
We start with the definition of breakeven and proceed using elementary algebra to derive the formula. Breakeven is a number and is created by knowing fixed and variable costs, and the retail sales price. It is thus not a point of discussion but is based on the assumptions of these variables.
Proof of Breakeven
Definition of BreakevenVolume: Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Definition
1.Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Breakdown of Definition
2. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + Variable Expenses
Further Analysis
3. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Subtract (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses) from both sides
4. Fixed Expenses = (Retail Price * Volume) — (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Factor
5. Fixed Expenses = Volume * (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Divide both sides by (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
6. Volume = Fixed Expenses
(Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Substitution based on Definition
7. Since (Retail Price — Unit Variable Expenses) is called Contribution Margin,
Therefore:
Breakeven Volume = Fixed Expenses / Contribution Margin
NAME_________________________________________________ DATE ____________
1. Explain some of the economic, social, and political considerations involved in changing the tax law.
2. Explain the difference between a Partnership, a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) and a Limited Liability Company (LLC). In each structure who has liability?
3. How is “control” defined for purposes of Section 351 of the IRS Code?
4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using debt in a firm’s capital structure?
5. Under what circumstances is a corporation’s assumption of liabilities considered boot in a Section 351exchange?
6. What are the tax consequences for the transferor and transferee when property is transferred to a newly created corporation in an exchange qualifying as nontaxable under Section 351?
7. Why are corporations allowed a dividend-received deduction? What dividends qualify for this special deduction?
8. Provide 3 examples of a Constructive Dividend. Are these Constructive Dividends taxable?
9. Discuss the tax consequences of a new Partnership Formation and give details to gain and losses and basis?
10. Provide 2 similarities and 2 differences when comparing Sections 351 and 721 of the IRS Code.
11. What is the difference between inside and outside basis with a partnership?
12. ABC Partnership distributes $12,000 of taxable income to partner Bob and $24,000 of tax-exempt income to Partner Bob. As a result of these two distributions, how does Bob’s basis change?
13. On January 1, Katie pays $2,000 for a 10% capital, profits, and loss interest in a partnership.
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different .docxTatianaMajor22
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different points in human development.
Using only my text as a reference:
Berger, K.S. (2011). The developing person through the life span (8th ed.).
I need 3 detailed PowerPoint slide with very detailed speaker notes. There must be detailed speaker notes on each slide. The 4th slide will be the reference.
.
Karimi 1 Big Picture Blog Post First Draft College .docxTatianaMajor22
Karimi 1
Big Picture Blog Post First Draft
College Girls in Media
Sogand Karimi
Media and Hollywood movies have affected and influenced society’s perception on
female college students. Due to Hollywood movies and media, society mostly recognizes the
negative stereotypes of a college women. Saran Donahoo, an associate professor and education
administration of Southern Illinois University, once said, “The messages in these films
consistently emphasized college as a place where young women come to have fun, engage in
romances with young men, experiment with sex and alcohol, face dilemmas regarding body
image, and encounter difficulties in associating with other college women.” In this essay I will
be talking about the recurring stereotypes and themes portrayed in three hollywood movies,
Spring Breakers, The house bunny and Legally Blond and how these stereotypes affect our
society.
The movie Spring Breakers is about four college girls who are bored with their daily
routines and want to escape on a spring break vacation to Florida. After realizing they don’t have
enough money, they rub a local diner with fake guns and ski masks. They break the laws in order
to get down to Florida, just to break more rules and laws once they’re there. During the film, you
will notice a lot of partying, drugs and sexual activity. The four girls wear bikinis for majority of
the film and are overly sexual. These are some common themes and stereotypes seen in all three
movies. Media and movies like spring breakers have made it a norm to constantly want to party,
get drunk and have sex as a college woman. In an article by Heather Long, she mentions how the
movie can even be seen as supporting rape culture. She believes because of these stereotypes
always being shown in media, it is contributing to the “girls asking for it” excuse when it comes
to rape cases with young girls. Long also said “...never mind the fact that thousands of college
students are spending their spring break not on a beach, but volunteering with groups like Habitat
for Humanity and the United Way, especially after Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy.” THIS shows
how media only displays one side of a certain group or story. Even though not all college girls
like to party and lay on a beach naked for spring break, that’s what media likes to portray. Not
only does this give the wrong message to our society but it influences bigger issues like rape, as
the author mentioned.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
Karimi 2
The movie House bunny. The House bunny is a movie about an ex playmate or girlfriend
if Hugh Hefner that gets kicked out of the Playboy Mansion due to her aging. She then becomes
a mother of an unpopular sorority with girls that are bit geeky, and unusual compared to other
girls on campus. The story.
Please try not to use hard words Thank youWeek 3Individual.docxTatianaMajor22
Please try not to use hard words Thank you
Week 3
Individual
Problems and Goals Case Study
Select one of the following three case studies in Ch. 6 of The Helping Process:
· Case Susanna
· Case James and Samantha
· Case Alicia and Montford
Identify three to five problems in the case study you have selected.
Write a 500- to 700-word paperthatincludes the following:
· A problem-solving strategy and a goal for each problem
· The services, resources, and supports the client may need and why
· A description of how goals are measurable and realistically attainable for the client
Here is the case studies
Exercise 3: Careful Assessment
The following case studies are about Susanna, James, Samantha, Alicia, and Montford, all
homeless children attending school. The principal of the school has asked you to conduct
an assessment of these children and provide initial recommendations.
Before you begin this exercise, go to the website that accompanies this book: www.
wadsworth.com/counseling/mcclam, Chapter Three, Link 1, to read more about homeless
families and children.
Susanna
Susanna is 15 years old. Th e city where she lives has four schools: two elementary, one
middle, and one high school. Th ere are about 1,500 students enrolled in the city/county
school district and about 450 in the local high school that Susanna is attending. For the
past six months, Susanna has been living with her boyfriend and his parents. Prior to this,
she left her mother’s home and lived on the streets. She is pregnant and her boyfriend’s
parents want her to move out of their home. Her father lives in a town with his girlfriend,
about 50 miles from the city. Her mother lives outside the city with Susanna’s baby brother.
Right now Susanna’s mother is receiving child support for the two children. Susanna wants
to have a portion of the child support so that she can find a place of her own to live. Her
mother says that the only way that Susanna can have access to that money is to move back
home. Susanna refuses to move back in with her mother.
You receive a call from the behavior specialist at Susanna’s high school. Susanna’s
mother is at the school demanding that Susanna be withdrawn from school. Susanna’s
mother indicates that Susanna will be moving in with her and will be enrolling in another
school district.
Currently Susanna is not doing very well in school. She misses school and she tells the
helper it is because she is tired and that she does not have good food to eat. She has not told
the helper that she is looking for a place to live. Right now she is failing two of her classes
and she has one B and two Ds. Her boyfriend has missed a lot of school, too.
James and Samantha
James is 10 years old and he has a sister, Samantha, who is 8. At the beginning of the
school year, both of the children were attending Boone Elementary School. Both children
live with their aunt and uncle; their parents are in prison. In the middle of the scho.
Please readRobert Geraci, Russia Minorities and Empire,” in .docxTatianaMajor22
Please read:
Robert Geraci, “Russia: Minorities and Empire,” in Abbott Gleason, ed., A Companion to Russian History (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), 243-260.
And discuss:
How does Geraci portray the legacy of the early Russian history for the make-up of 18-19th century Russia?
Please read: Leonard Victor Rutgers, “Roman Policy Towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century C.E.,” in Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74.
And discuss: Rutgers surveys the different reasons historians have given for the expulsion of the Jews from Rome in the first century C.E. Who place did Jews have in Roman society at this time? Were they expelled because of their religious practices, or because they were ‘unruly’ as Rutgers argues? If so, what caused them to act in this way? What kind of historical evidence does the author use?
There are 2 essay, each one should write at least 300-350 words and plus one reference page.
MLA format. Must use quote( “ ”) for every source you use from website. And put (author, page number) behind quote.
Roman Policy towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century
C.E.
Author(s): Leonard Victor Rutgers
Source: Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74
Published by: University of California Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005 .
Accessed: 26/08/2011 13:35
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Classical
Antiquity.
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http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005?origin=JSTOR-pdf
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
LEONARD VICTOR RUTGERS
Roman Policy towards the Jews:
Expulsions from the City of Rome
during the First Century c. E.
Tant de causes secretes se melent souvent a la cause apparente, tant de ressorts
inconnus servent a persecuter un homme, qu'il est impossible de demeler dans les
siecles posterieures la source cachee des malheurs des hommes les plus consider
ables, a plus forte raison celle du supplice d'un particulier qui ne pouvait etre
connu que par ceux de son parti.
-Voltaire, Traite sur la tolerance (1763)
IN THIS ARTICLE I want to discuss the evidence for expulsions of Jews from
the city of Rome in the first century C.E. Scholars have long been interested in the
reasons underlying these expulsions. Because the anci.
Ford VS ChevroletThere are many reasons that make the Chevy.docxTatianaMajor22
Ford VS Chevrolet
There are many reasons that make the Chevy’s and Ford’s motors two most common trucks. Studies reveal that that they are the most popular vehicles on sales today. It is because they are powerful, versatile and reasonably priced. They also come in a wide variety of configurations and styles. However, many buyers and sellers have questioned themselves on the better vehicle compared to the other in terms of quality, Wi-Fi, price ranges, value, and costs. To compare and contrast on this subject, let us take an example of two vehicles each from each company to facilitate comparison.
Ford offers the full-size track with automatic high-beam control, automatic parallel parking and power-retractable running boards. Fords are elegant, and they are mostly aluminum making them save weight and bolster gas mileage. None of these features are offered Chevy’s. Chevrolets have outstanding quality. They are mostly comprised of steel, for instance, the Chevrolet Silverado. This makes them good for rough roads and difficult terrains.
Fords have employed the use of up to date Wi-Fi technology. Ford intends to provide the Ford Sync, which will provide robust connections for occupants. Latest Chevrolet brands Malibu utilize the 4G LTE Wi-Fi Technology that provides rich in-vehicle experiences. This technology is powerful compared to Ford Sync, and is used for connecting devices and executing few remote operations within the car.
From the value and cost standpoint, Ford can consume a little more, and its payload capacity is a little higher. Additionally, its mileage is too better. The prices vary from nation to nation. Chevrolet seems to be a little cheaper, and reasonably priced going for $33,044, which is slightly less than Ford, but the differences are not serious to propel buyers towards one truck leaving the other
Technophiles are likely to put their preferences on Ford to Chevrolet. On overall, Fords have many features as compared Chevy’s. However, they may be hard to maintain. Compared to Fords, Chevrolets are reliable and cheaper. However, the two brands are equally good performers. It is, therefore, prudent to pick what one thinks would fit his or her usage and preference and personal style
Ethical Systems, Research Paper, Spring 2015, Douglas Green, Page 1 of 1
Ethical
Systems/Final
Research
Paper
2,000
words
minimum,
double-‐spaced
Final
Draft
Due:
Tuesday,
April
28,
12:00
pm
(afternoon)
Please
email
your
final
research
paper
to
me
via
MS
Word
attachment
AND
by
cutting/pasting
the
entire
document
into
the
body
of
your
email.
IF
YOU
DO
NOT
RECEIVE
A
CONFIRMATION
EMAIL
BACK,
I
DID
NOT
RECEIVE
YOUR
ESSAY
AND
YOU
WILL
LOSE
ALL
CREDIT
FOR
THIS
REQUIREMENT.
NO
LATE
WORK
WILL
BE
ACCEPTED…
PERIOD!
.
Fairness and Discipline Weve all been disciplined at one.docxTatianaMajor22
Fairness and Discipline
We've all been disciplined at one time or another by a parent or a teacher. What disciplinary experiences have you had as a child that took a non-punitive approach?
I need paragraph or half page with reference
.
Appendix 12A Statement of Cash Flows—Direct MethodLEARNING .docxTatianaMajor22
Appendix 12A
Statement of Cash Flows—Direct Method
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
6
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the direct method.
To explain and illustrate the direct method, we will use the transactions of Computer Services Company for 2014, to prepare a statement of cash flows. Illustration 12A-1 presents information related to 2014 for Computer Services Company.
To prepare a statement of cash flows under the direct approach, we will apply the three steps outlined in Illustration 12-4.
Illustration 12A-1
Comparative balance sheets, income statement, and additional information for Computer Services Company
STEP 1: OPERATING ACTIVITIES
DETERMINE NET CASH PROVIDED/USED BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES BY CONVERTING NET INCOME FROM AN ACCRUAL BASIS TO A CASH BASIS
Under the direct method, companies compute net cash provided by operating activities by adjusting each item in the income statement from the accrual basis to the cash basis. To simplify and condense the operating activities section, companies report only major classes of operating cash receipts and cash payments. For these major classes, the difference between cash receipts and cash payments is the net cash provided by operating activities. These relationships are as shown in Illustration 12A-2.
Illustration 12A-2
Major classes of cash receipts and payments
An efficient way to apply the direct method is to analyze the items reported in the income statement in the order in which they are listed. We then determine cash receipts and cash payments related to these revenues and expenses. The following pages present the adjustments required to prepare a statement of cash flows for Computer Services Company using the direct approach.
CASH RECEIPTS FROM CUSTOMERS.
The income statement for Computer Services Company reported sales revenue from customers of $507,000. How much of that was cash receipts? To answer that, companies need to consider the change in accounts receivable during the year. When accounts receivable increase during the year, revenues on an accrual basis are higher than cash receipts from customers. Operations led to revenues, but not all of these revenues resulted in cash receipts.
To determine the amount of cash receipts, the company deducts from sales revenue the increase in accounts receivable. On the other hand, there may be a decrease in accounts receivable. That would occur if cash receipts from customers exceeded sales revenue. In that case, the company adds to sales revenue the decrease in accounts receivable. For Computer Services Company, accounts receivable decreased $10,000. Thus, cash receipts from customers were $517,000, computed as shown in Illustration 12A-3.
Illustration 12A-3
Computation of cash receipts from customers
Computer Services can also determine cash receipts from customers from an analysis of the Accounts Receivable account, as shown in Illustration 12A-4.
Illustration 12A-4
Analysis of Accounts Receivable
Illustration.
Effects of StressProvide a 1-page description of a stressful .docxTatianaMajor22
Effects of Stress
Provide a 1-page description of a stressful event currently occurring in your life.
Discuss I am married work a full time job as an occupational therapy assistant am taking two courses
Have to take care of a home feed the animals attend to laundry
Think of my pateitns worry about their well being and what I can do for them ( I bring home my patients issues)
Constantly doing paper work for work such as documentation for billing
I feel like I have no free time for me some days I don’t even eat dinner or lunch because I don’t have time to make anything or am just too tired to cook
On top of this I am married and married ppl do argue and my husband am I have been bunting heads on finances.
Then, referring to information you learned throughout this course, address the following:
· What physiological changes occur in the brain due to the stress response?
· What emotional and cognitive effects might occur due to this stressful situation?
· Would the above changes (physiological, cognitive, or emotional) be any different if the same stress were being experienced by a person of the opposite sex or someone much older or younger than you?
· If the situation continues, how might your physical health be affected?
· What three behavioral strategies would you implement to reduce the effects of this stressor? Describe each strategy. Explain how each behavior could cause changes in brain physiology (e.g., exercise can raise serotonin levels).
· If you were encouraging an adult client to make the above changes, what ethical considerations would you have to keep in mind? How would you address those ethical considerations?
In addition to citing the online course and the text, you are also required to cite a minimum of four scholarly sources. For reputable web sources, look for .gov or .edu sites as opposed to .com sites. Please do not use Wikipedia.
Your paper should be double-spaced, in 12-point Times New Roman font, and with normal 1-inch margins; written in APA style; and free of typographical and grammatical errors. It should include a title page with a running head, an abstract, and a reference page.
The body of the paper should be at least 6 pages in length total
not including the reference or title page
Assignment 1 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Described a stressful event.
20
Explained the physiological changes that occur in the brain due to the stress response.
36
Explained the emotional and cognitive effects that may occur due to this stressful situation.
32
Analyzed potential differences in physiological, cognitive, and emotional responses in someone of a different age or sex.
32
Discussed the physical health risks.
28
Provided three behavioral strategies to reduce the effects of the stressor and explained how each could cause changes in brain physiology.
40
Analyzed ethical considerations in implementing behavioral strategies and offered suggestions for addressing these.
40
Integrated at least two scholarly references .
Design Factors NotesCIO’s Office 5 People IT Chief’s Offi.docxTatianaMajor22
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Standard floor (first floor) Lesson 2 Project Plan info
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Basement floor
Design Factors
Notes
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cisco Catalyst: Switch: WS-C3750G-24PS-S: 24 Ports
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Color Laser Printer
Minimum of One per Room or One per 20 people
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor and Server RM B on this floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Horizontal Runs
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Applicataion
U.S. Minimum Requirement Ranges
Space per Employee - 1997
Two people, such as a supervisor and an employee, can meet in an office with a table or desk between them
60" to 72" x 90" to 126:/5.78m2 to 11.7m2
280Sq. Ft./26.0m2
Worker has a primary desk plus a return
60" to 72"x60"to 84"/5.78 to 7.8m2
193Sq. Ft./17.9m2
Executive office - three to four people can meet around a desk
105 to 130"x96 to 123"/9.75 to 11.4 m2
142Sq. Ft./13.2m2
Basic workstation such as a call center
42" to 52" x 60" to 72"/3.9 to 6.7 m2
114Sq. Ft./10.6 m2
NT1310: Project
Page 1
PRO JECT D ESC RIPT ION
As the project manager for the Cable Planning team, you will manage the creation of the cable plan for
the new building that will be built, with construction set to begin in six weeks.
The deliverables for the entire Cable Plan will consist of an Executive Summary, a PowerPoint
Presentation and an Excel Spreadsheet. You will develop different parts of each of these in three parts.
The final organization should contain these elements:
The Executive Summary:
o Project Introduction
o Standards and Codes
Cable Standards and Codes
Building Standards and Codes
o Project Materials
o Copper Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Design Considerations
o Basement Server Comp.
Question 12.5 pointsSaveThe OSU studies concluded that le.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains questions about leadership, motivation, communication, groups/teams, and decision making. The questions assess knowledge of topics like situational leadership theory, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, organizational communication barriers, stages of team development, and group decision making techniques like brainstorming.
Case Study 1 Questions1. What is the allocated budget .docxTatianaMajor22
Case Study 1 Questions:
1. What is the allocated budget ? $250,000
2. Where does the server room located? Currently, there is no server room
3. What is the number of users with PCs inside each existing site?
Currently there are
4. What is the current cabling used in each location? (cat5e or cat6) Current cabling does not meet the company’s current and future needs
5. Do want us to upgrade token Ring or use a completely new Ethernet network What is your recommendation and why?
6. regarding the ordering system , it is not clear what the we should do , do you want to talk about how to connect the system to the network or how to built the ordering online system because it is more software engineering than networking . Talk about the kind of network (hardware) you recommend based on the business requirements
7. all the sites should have access to our servers in the main branch? yes
8. Regarding the order software, do you need more details about the way it works or just about its connection with the network? Your solution should be from a network point of view
9. Distances are given in Meters or feet? feet
10. Shipment is done by truck, or ships? Currently, only trucking
11. In Dimebox branch, where are administration offices located? See Business goals # 4
12. What is the current network connectivity status? How many devices are currently on the network? How they are physically laid out? Is cabling running all over the floor, hidden in walls or threaded through the ceiling? What are the switches used and its speed? Currently, only the office is networked (token ring) NOVELL
13. What is the minimum Internet speed wanted? See Business Goals on page 2 – I only can tell you what we need the network for, you must tell me what we need to meet the business needs
14. Will the corporation provide wireless access? If yes will it be in all department and buildings? Wireless access would be helpful if we can justify the cost
15. Are there phones in offices? yes
16. What is the internet speed available now? What speed do you want for future? Internet access is through time warner cable company which is not very reliable
17. Do employees access their emails outside the company? yes
18. Do you have plans for future expansion? We like to increase our customer base by 20% over the next year
REMEMBER, you are the IT expert, I’m only a business person who must rely on your expertise.
Network Design and Performance
Case Study
Dooma-Flochies, Inc. with headquarters located on Podunk Road in Trumansburg, NY, is the sole manufacturer of Dooma-Flochies (big surprise). They currently have a manufacturing facility in, Lake Ridge, NY (across Cayuga Lake) on Cayuga Dr. and have recently diversified by purchasing a company, This-N-That, on Industry Ave. in, Dime Box Texas. This-N-That is the sole competitor of Domma-Flochies with their product Thinga-Ma-Jigs. This acquisition gives Dooma-Flochies, Inc a monopoly in this mark.
Behavior in OrganizationsIntercultural Communications Exercise .docxTatianaMajor22
Behavior in Organizations
Intercultural Communications Exercise Response Paper –
Week 5
The most overt cultural differences, such as greeting rituals and name format, can be overcome most easily. The underlying, intangible differences are very difficult to overcome. In this case, the underlying cultural differences are
· Assumptions about the purpose of the event (is the party strictly for fun and for relationship building, or are their business matters to take care of?).
· Assumptions about the purpose and the nature of business relationship.
· Assumptions about power and leadership relationships (who makes the decisions and how?).
· Response styles (verbal and nonverbal signals of agreement, disagreement, politeness, etc.).
Many (though not all) cultural differences can be overcome if you carefully observe other people, think creatively, remain flexible, and remember that your own culture is not inherently superior to others.
The Scenario
Three corporations are planning a joint venture to sponsor an international concert tour. The corporations are Decibel, an agency representing the musicians (from the US, Britain, and Japan); Images, a marketing firm which will handle sales of tickets, snacks and beverages, clothing, and CDs; and Event, a special events company which will hire the ushers, concessionaires, and security officers; print the programs; and clean up the arenas after the shows. The companies come from three different cultures: Blue, Green, and Red. Each has specific cultural traits, customs, and practices.
You are a manager in one of these companies. You will attend the opening cocktail party in Perth, Australia the evening before a 3-day meeting during which the three companies will negotiate the details of the partnership. Your management team includes a Vice President and a number of other managers.
During the 3-day meeting, the companies have the following goals:
Decibel
· As high a royalty rate as possible on sales of T-shirts, videos, and CDs
· Aggressive marketing and advertising to increase attendance and sales
· Good security, both before and during the show Image
Image
· Well known bands that will be easy to market
· As much income as possible from the concerts
· Smoothly functioning event so that publicity from early concerts is positive
Event
· Bands that are not likely to provoke stampedes, riots, or other antisocial behavior
· Bands that are reliable and will show up on time, ready to play
· As much income as possible from the concerts
The cultures that are assigned to the various companies are:
BLUE CULTURE
Image (Marketing Company)
Beliefs, Values, and Attitudes that Underlie This Culture’s Communication
Believe that fate and luck control most things.
Believe in feelings more than reasoning.
An authoritarian leader makes the ultimate decisions.
Nonverbal Traits of This Culture
Treat time as something that is unimportant. It is not a commodity that can be lost.
Conversation distance is close (about 15 inches, face-.
Discussion Question Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disord.docxTatianaMajor22
Discussion Question:
Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disorders
There are numerous theories that attempt to explain the development and manifestation of psychological disorders. Some researchers hold that certain disorders result from learned behaviors (behavioral theory), while other researchers believe that there is a genetic or biological basis to psychological disorders (medical model), while still others hold that psychological disorders stem from unresolved unconscious conflict (psychoanalytic theory). How would each of these theoretical viewpoints explain anxiety disorders? Does one explain the development and manifestation of anxiety disorders better than the others?
200- 400 words please
Three min resources with
in text citations and examples
you can use the following as a module reference
cite as university 2014
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders such as panic disorder, specific phobias, and social anxiety disorder feature a heightened autonomic nervous system response that is above and beyond what would be considered normal when faced with the object or situation that the person reacts to. For example, a person with a specific phobia of spiders (called arachnophobia) experiences a heightened autonomic response when confronted with a spider (or even an image of a spider). This anxiety response must result in significant distress or impairment. In general, anxiety disorders have been linked to underactive gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the brain, resulting in overexcitability of the amygdala and the anterior cingulate cortex. Additionally, genetic research shows that anxiety disorders demonstrate a clear pattern of genetic predisposition
Charles Darwin's Perspective
We talked about Charles Darwin when discussing evolution and natural selection. Darwin was also very interested in emotions. One of his books published in 1872,The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, was devoted to this topic.
Darwin believed that emotions play an important role in the survival of the species and result from evolutionary processes in the same way as other behaviors and psychological functions. Darwin's writing on this topic also prompted psychologists to study animal behavior as a way to better understand human behavior.
James–Lange Theory of Emotions
Modern theories of emotion can be traced to William James and Carl Lange (Pinel, 2011). William James was a renowned Harvard psychologist who is sometimes called the father of American psychology. Carl Lange was a Danish physician. James and Lange formulated the same theory of emotions independently at about the same time (1884). As a result, it is called the James–Lange theory of emotions. This theory reversed the commonsensical notion that emotions are automatic responses to events around us. Instead, it proposes that emotions are the brain's interpretation of physiological responses to emotionally provocative stimuli.
Cannon–Bard Theory of Emotions
In 1915, Harvard physiologist Walt.
I have always liked Dustin Hoffmans style of acting, in this mov.docxTatianaMajor22
I have always liked Dustin Hoffman's style of acting, in this movie he takes on a sexually deprived young male just out of college, and has never been with a female, and is duped by horny older woman that feels neglected. Dustin Hoffman takes the characters form of a young male, goofy, respectful virgin and intelligent male, missing something but not really sure at the beginning till Ann Bancroft coaxes him with seduction to fulfill her own needs. In an other movie called "The life of Little Big Man" he plays almost the same character but as a white child raised by the Native Americans and a wise old chief that deeply care and loves him as his own, and Fay Dunaway plays a Holy rollers wife that is older and sexually deprived and feeling neglected by her husband and also she goes through major changes in her life from devoted wife, to a honey bell/ house hooker, whats funny Dustin Hoffman is a awesome actor but has to have his surrounding characters bring his character to life. The Graduate was Dustin Hoffman's first big movie of his career.
I actually liked movie "Little Big man" way better due to he went through major changes in his life, from being a Native boy warrior, captured by Yankees, meets Fay Dunaway who loves to give baths, to finding his sister who teaches him to be a gunslinger and then returns to his Grand Father to be a native again and tells his blind Grand Father the world of the white man is a crazy one, then his see the Psyho Col. Custer and gets his revenge by telling Custer the truth. The movie Little Big Man makes you laugh, teaches you things about people and survial and cry at times... its a must see...
Although a stray away from the Benjamin Braddock written about in the novel The Graduate, Dustin Hoffman does an awesome job with this character on film. When you first meet Ben he is at a party that his parents are throwing in his academic honor upon his graduation from school and return home. The whole night, Hoffman stumbles though various conversations and tries to coyly escape from the festivities. Small things such as this Hoffman did a great job at, conveying the hesitance and crisis that Ben was going through as a graduate. There are multiple times in the movie he hardly expresses anything at all, yet it clearly shows you that Ben is having a very hard time internally with everything going on. Even through his relationships with Mrs. Robinson and her daughter Elaine you see the young man struggling with himself through either failed attempts at affection or lack thereof.
.
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior Wh.docxTatianaMajor22
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior? Why, or why not? Support your answer with at least three reasons that justify your position.
100 words
Discuss the differences between an attitude and a behavior. Provide 4 substantive reasons why it is important for organizations to monitor and mitigate employee behavior that is either beneficial or detrimental to the organization's goals and existence.
150 words
.
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please clic.docxTatianaMajor22
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please click "View in Browser." V BUS 520Week 9 Assignment 4 Paper
I need the paper as soon as possible
Students, please view the "Submit a Clickable Rubric Assignment" in the Student Center.
Instructors, training on how to grade is within the Instructor Center.
Assignment 4: Leadership Style: What Do People Do When They Are Leading?
Due Week 9 and worth 100 points
Choose one (1) of the following CEOs for this assignment: Larry Page (Google), Tony Hsieh (Zappos), Gary Kelly (Southwest Airlines), Meg Whitman (Hewlett Packard), Ursula Burns (Xerox), Terri Kelly (W.L. Gore), Ellen Kullman (DuPont), or Bob McDonald (Procter & Gamble). Use the Internet to investigate the leadership style and effectiveness of the selected CEO. (Note: Just choose one that is easier for you to right about.) It does not matter to me which CEO you pick
Write a five to six (5-6) page paper in which you:
1. Provide a brief (one [1] paragraph) background of the CEO.
2. Analyze the CEO’s leadership style and philosophy, and how the CEO’s leadership style aligns with the culture.
3. Examine the CEO’s personal and organizational values.
4. Evaluate how the values of the CEO are likely to influence ethical behavior within the organization.
5. Determine the CEO’s three (3) greatest strengths and three (3) greatest weaknesses.
6. Select the quality that you believe contributes most to this leader’s success. Support your reasoning.
7. Assess how communication and collaboration, and power and politics influence group (i.e., the organization’s) dynamics.
8. Use at least five (5) quality academic resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
· Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
· Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
· Analyze the formation and dynamics of group behavior and work teams, including the application of power in groups.
· Outline various individual and group decision-making processes and key factors affecting these processes.
· Examine the primary conflict levels within organization and the process for negotiating resolutions.
· Examine how power and influence empower and affect office politics, political interpretations, and political behavior.
· Use technology and information resources to research issues in organizational behavior.
· Write clearly and concisely about organizational behavior using proper writing mechanics.
Click here.
Is the proliferation of social media and communication devices a .docxTatianaMajor22
Social media and communication devices have both benefits and drawbacks for society. While they allow easy connection with others and access to information, overuse can negatively impact relationships and mental health. Overall, moderation is key to reap the upsides of technology while avoiding the downsides.
MATH 107 FINAL EXAMINATIONMULTIPLE CHOICE1. Deter.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains a 30-question math exam covering topics like functions, graphs, equations, inequalities, logarithms, and other math concepts. It includes multiple choice, short answer, and show work questions assessing skills like domain and range, solving equations, graphing, composites, inverses, lines, maximizing profit, and more. Students must demonstrate mathematical reasoning and problem-solving abilities.
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring.docxTatianaMajor22
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Is there a lack of information on strategic planning? Nope. I think the process of planning is poorly understood, and rarely endorsed. The reasons are simple enough. Planning requires a commitment of resources (time, talent, money); it requires insight; it requires a total immersion in the corporate culture. While organizations do plan, planning is invariably attached to the budget process. It is typically here that the CIO lays out his/her vision for the coming year Now a few years ago authors began writing on the value of aligning IT purpose to organizational purpose. They wrote at a time when enterprise architectural planning was fairly new, and enterprise resource management was on the lips of every executive. My view is that alignment is a natural process driven by the availability of the tools to accomplish it. Twenty years ago making sense of IT was more about processing power, and database management. We are in a new age of IT, and it is the computer that is the network, not the network as an independent self-contained exchange of information. If you will spend some time reviewing the basic materials I provided on strategic planning and alignment, we can begin our discussions for the course. Again, here is the problem I would like for us to tackle: If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Most of the articles I bundled together for this week are replete with tables and charts. These can be a heavy read. Your approach should be to review these articles for the "big ideas" or lessons that are take away. I think these studies are significant enough that we will conclude our first week with an understanding of the roles between executive leaders, and how they see Information Technology playing a role in shaping a business strategy.
Read the articles to answer the question. Please No Plagerism or verbatim but you are allowed to quote from the article.
Achieving and Sustaining
Business-IT Alignment
Jerry Luftman
Tom Brier
I
n recent decades, billions of dollars have been invested in intormation tech-
nology (IT). A key concern of business executives is alignment—applying IT
in an appropriate and timely way and in harmony with business strategies,
goals, and needs. This issue addresses both how IT is aligned with the busi-
ness and how the business should be aligned with IT Frustratingly, organizations
seem to find it difficult or impossible to harness the power of information tech-
nology for their own long-term benefit, even though there is worldwide evi-
dence that IT has the power to transform whole industries and markets.' How
can companies.
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs .docxTatianaMajor22
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs/ contribution margin.
We start with the definition of breakeven and proceed using elementary algebra to derive the formula. Breakeven is a number and is created by knowing fixed and variable costs, and the retail sales price. It is thus not a point of discussion but is based on the assumptions of these variables.
Proof of Breakeven
Definition of BreakevenVolume: Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Definition
1.Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Breakdown of Definition
2. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + Variable Expenses
Further Analysis
3. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Subtract (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses) from both sides
4. Fixed Expenses = (Retail Price * Volume) — (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Factor
5. Fixed Expenses = Volume * (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Divide both sides by (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
6. Volume = Fixed Expenses
(Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Substitution based on Definition
7. Since (Retail Price — Unit Variable Expenses) is called Contribution Margin,
Therefore:
Breakeven Volume = Fixed Expenses / Contribution Margin
NAME_________________________________________________ DATE ____________
1. Explain some of the economic, social, and political considerations involved in changing the tax law.
2. Explain the difference between a Partnership, a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) and a Limited Liability Company (LLC). In each structure who has liability?
3. How is “control” defined for purposes of Section 351 of the IRS Code?
4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using debt in a firm’s capital structure?
5. Under what circumstances is a corporation’s assumption of liabilities considered boot in a Section 351exchange?
6. What are the tax consequences for the transferor and transferee when property is transferred to a newly created corporation in an exchange qualifying as nontaxable under Section 351?
7. Why are corporations allowed a dividend-received deduction? What dividends qualify for this special deduction?
8. Provide 3 examples of a Constructive Dividend. Are these Constructive Dividends taxable?
9. Discuss the tax consequences of a new Partnership Formation and give details to gain and losses and basis?
10. Provide 2 similarities and 2 differences when comparing Sections 351 and 721 of the IRS Code.
11. What is the difference between inside and outside basis with a partnership?
12. ABC Partnership distributes $12,000 of taxable income to partner Bob and $24,000 of tax-exempt income to Partner Bob. As a result of these two distributions, how does Bob’s basis change?
13. On January 1, Katie pays $2,000 for a 10% capital, profits, and loss interest in a partnership.
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different .docxTatianaMajor22
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different points in human development.
Using only my text as a reference:
Berger, K.S. (2011). The developing person through the life span (8th ed.).
I need 3 detailed PowerPoint slide with very detailed speaker notes. There must be detailed speaker notes on each slide. The 4th slide will be the reference.
.
Karimi 1 Big Picture Blog Post First Draft College .docxTatianaMajor22
Karimi 1
Big Picture Blog Post First Draft
College Girls in Media
Sogand Karimi
Media and Hollywood movies have affected and influenced society’s perception on
female college students. Due to Hollywood movies and media, society mostly recognizes the
negative stereotypes of a college women. Saran Donahoo, an associate professor and education
administration of Southern Illinois University, once said, “The messages in these films
consistently emphasized college as a place where young women come to have fun, engage in
romances with young men, experiment with sex and alcohol, face dilemmas regarding body
image, and encounter difficulties in associating with other college women.” In this essay I will
be talking about the recurring stereotypes and themes portrayed in three hollywood movies,
Spring Breakers, The house bunny and Legally Blond and how these stereotypes affect our
society.
The movie Spring Breakers is about four college girls who are bored with their daily
routines and want to escape on a spring break vacation to Florida. After realizing they don’t have
enough money, they rub a local diner with fake guns and ski masks. They break the laws in order
to get down to Florida, just to break more rules and laws once they’re there. During the film, you
will notice a lot of partying, drugs and sexual activity. The four girls wear bikinis for majority of
the film and are overly sexual. These are some common themes and stereotypes seen in all three
movies. Media and movies like spring breakers have made it a norm to constantly want to party,
get drunk and have sex as a college woman. In an article by Heather Long, she mentions how the
movie can even be seen as supporting rape culture. She believes because of these stereotypes
always being shown in media, it is contributing to the “girls asking for it” excuse when it comes
to rape cases with young girls. Long also said “...never mind the fact that thousands of college
students are spending their spring break not on a beach, but volunteering with groups like Habitat
for Humanity and the United Way, especially after Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy.” THIS shows
how media only displays one side of a certain group or story. Even though not all college girls
like to party and lay on a beach naked for spring break, that’s what media likes to portray. Not
only does this give the wrong message to our society but it influences bigger issues like rape, as
the author mentioned.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
Karimi 2
The movie House bunny. The House bunny is a movie about an ex playmate or girlfriend
if Hugh Hefner that gets kicked out of the Playboy Mansion due to her aging. She then becomes
a mother of an unpopular sorority with girls that are bit geeky, and unusual compared to other
girls on campus. The story.
Please try not to use hard words Thank youWeek 3Individual.docxTatianaMajor22
Please try not to use hard words Thank you
Week 3
Individual
Problems and Goals Case Study
Select one of the following three case studies in Ch. 6 of The Helping Process:
· Case Susanna
· Case James and Samantha
· Case Alicia and Montford
Identify three to five problems in the case study you have selected.
Write a 500- to 700-word paperthatincludes the following:
· A problem-solving strategy and a goal for each problem
· The services, resources, and supports the client may need and why
· A description of how goals are measurable and realistically attainable for the client
Here is the case studies
Exercise 3: Careful Assessment
The following case studies are about Susanna, James, Samantha, Alicia, and Montford, all
homeless children attending school. The principal of the school has asked you to conduct
an assessment of these children and provide initial recommendations.
Before you begin this exercise, go to the website that accompanies this book: www.
wadsworth.com/counseling/mcclam, Chapter Three, Link 1, to read more about homeless
families and children.
Susanna
Susanna is 15 years old. Th e city where she lives has four schools: two elementary, one
middle, and one high school. Th ere are about 1,500 students enrolled in the city/county
school district and about 450 in the local high school that Susanna is attending. For the
past six months, Susanna has been living with her boyfriend and his parents. Prior to this,
she left her mother’s home and lived on the streets. She is pregnant and her boyfriend’s
parents want her to move out of their home. Her father lives in a town with his girlfriend,
about 50 miles from the city. Her mother lives outside the city with Susanna’s baby brother.
Right now Susanna’s mother is receiving child support for the two children. Susanna wants
to have a portion of the child support so that she can find a place of her own to live. Her
mother says that the only way that Susanna can have access to that money is to move back
home. Susanna refuses to move back in with her mother.
You receive a call from the behavior specialist at Susanna’s high school. Susanna’s
mother is at the school demanding that Susanna be withdrawn from school. Susanna’s
mother indicates that Susanna will be moving in with her and will be enrolling in another
school district.
Currently Susanna is not doing very well in school. She misses school and she tells the
helper it is because she is tired and that she does not have good food to eat. She has not told
the helper that she is looking for a place to live. Right now she is failing two of her classes
and she has one B and two Ds. Her boyfriend has missed a lot of school, too.
James and Samantha
James is 10 years old and he has a sister, Samantha, who is 8. At the beginning of the
school year, both of the children were attending Boone Elementary School. Both children
live with their aunt and uncle; their parents are in prison. In the middle of the scho.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
The chapter Lifelines of National Economy in Class 10 Geography focuses on the various modes of transportation and communication that play a vital role in the economic development of a country. These lifelines are crucial for the movement of goods, services, and people, thereby connecting different regions and promoting economic activities.
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27 Eighteenth and Nineteenth Cen
1. Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 357
Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries
The Asante Kingdom of West Africa
The Asante kingdom, part of the larger Akan culture was
formed around 1700 under the
leadership of Osei Tutu. Osei Tutu brought together a
confederation of states that had grown
wealthy and powerful as a result of the area’s lucrative trade in
gold, sold to both northern
merchants across the Sahara and European navigators. The
centralized system of government
that emerged was a complex network of chiefs and court
officials under a single paramount
leader. A variety of gold regalia was used to distinguish rank
and position within the court.
Among the Asante (or Ashanti), a popular legend relates how
two young men—Ota Karaban and
his friend Kwaku Ameyaw—learned the art of weaving by
observing a spider weaving its web.
One night, the two went out into the forest to check their traps,
and they were amazed by a
beautiful spider’s web whose many unique designs sparkled in
the moonlight. The spider, named
Ananse, offered to show the men how to weave such designs in
exchange for a few favors. After
completing the favors and learning how to weave the designs
2. with a single thread, the men
returned home to Bonwire (the town in the Asante region of
Ghana where kente weaving
originated), and their discovery was soon reported to
Asantehene Osei Tutu. The asantehene
(title of the Asante monarch) adopted their creation, named
kente, as a royal cloth reserved for
special occasions, and Bonwire became the leading kente
weaving center for the asantehene
and his court.
Asantehene Osei Tutu II wearing kente cloth, 2005 (photo:
Retlaw Snellac, CC BY 2.0)
https://flic.kr/p/AQ7df
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 358
Originally, the use of kente was reserved for Asante royalty and
limited to special social and
sacred functions. Even as production has increased and kente
has become more accessible to
those outside the royal court, it continues to be associated with
wealth, high social status, and
cultural sophistication. Kente is also found in Asante shrines to
the deities, or abosom, as a mark
of their spiritual power.
Patterns each have a name, as does each cloth in its entirety.
Names can be inspired by
historical events, proverbs, philosophical concepts, oral
3. literature, moral values, human and
animal behavior, individual achievements, or even individuals
in pop culture. In the past, when
purchasing a cloth, the aesthetic and social appeal of the cloth’s
was as important as—or
sometimes even more important than—its visual pattern or
color.
The King has Boarded the Ship (Asante kente cloth), c. 1985,
rayon (collection of Dr. Courtnay Micots)
This cloth is named The King Has Boarded the Ship, and it
includes both warp and weft patterns.
The warp pattern, consisting of two multicolor stripes on blue,
relates to the proverb “Fie buo yE
buna,” meaning the head of the family has a difficult task. The
weft patterns vary throughout the
cloth; these examples are “NkyEmfrE,” a broken pot, and
“Kwadum Asa,” an empty gunpowder
keg.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 359
The King has Boarded the Ship (details), left: “Broken Pot”
pattern; right: “Empty Powder Keg” pattern, c. 1985,
rayon (collection of Dr. Courtnay Micots)
Social changes and modern living have brought about
4. significant changes in how kente is used.
It is no longer only the privilege of royalty; anyone who can
afford it can buy kente. The old
tradition of not cutting the cloth has also long been set aside,
and it may be sewn into other
forms such as dresses, shirts, or shoes. Printed versions of kente
are mass produced and
marketed, and both woven and printed versions are used by
fashion designers in Ghana and
abroad.
Kente print bag, 1990s (photo: Huzzah Vintage, CC BY-NC 2.0)
Kente is more than just a cloth. It is an iconic visual
representation of the history, philosophy,
ethics, oral literature, religious belief, social values, and
political thought of West Africa. Kente is
exported as one of the key symbols of African heritage and
pride in African ancestry throughout
https://flic.kr/p/8s3EaV
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 360
the diaspora. In spite of the proliferation of both the hand-
woven and machine-printed kente, the
design is still regarded as a symbol of social prestige, nobility,
and cultural sophistication.
Europe and the Age of Enlightenment
Toward the middle of the eighteenth century a shift in thinking
5. occurred. This shift is known as
the Enlightenment. You have probably already heard of some
important Enlightenment figures,
like Rousseau, Diderot and Voltaire. It is helpful to think about
the word “enlighten” here—the
idea of shedding light on something, illuminating it, making it
clear.
Jean-Antoine Houdon, Voltaire, 1778, marble (National Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C.) (photo: Sara Stierch, CC
BY 2.0)
The thinkers of the Enlightenment, influenced by the scientific
revolutions of the previous
century, believed in shedding the light of science and reason on
the world in order to question
traditional ideas and ways of doing things. The scientific
revolution (based on empirical
observation, and not on metaphysics or spirituality) gave the
impression that the universe
behaved according to universal and unchanging laws (think of
Newton here). This provided a
model for looking rationally on human institutions as well as
nature.
The French Revolution and Neoclassicism
The Enlightenment encouraged criticism of the corruption of the
monarchy in France (at this
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltaire#mediaviewer/File:Voltair
e_by_Jean-Antoine_Houdon_%281778%29.jpg
6. Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 361
point King Louis XVI), and the aristocracy. Enlightenment
thinkers condemned Rococo art for
being immoral and indecent, and called for a new kind of art
that would be moral instead of
immoral and teach people right and wrong.
In opposition to the frivolous sensuality of Rococo painters like
Jean-Honoré Fragonard and
François Boucher, the Neoclassicists looked back to the French
painter Nicolas Poussin for their
inspiration (Poussin’s work exemplifies the interest in
classicism in French art of the seventeenth
century). The decision to promote “Poussiniste” painting
became an ethical consideration—they
believed that strong drawing was rational, therefore morally
better. They believed that art should
be cerebral, not sensual.
The Neoclassicists, such as Jacques-Louis David (pronounced
Da-VEED), preferred the well-
delineated form—clear drawing and modeling (shading).
Drawing was considered more
important than painting. The Neoclassical surface had to look
perfectly smooth—no evidence of
brush-strokes should be discernible to the naked eye.
France was on the brink of its first revolution in 1789, and the
Neoclassicists wanted to express a
rationality and seriousness that was fitting for their times.
Artists like David supported the rebels
through an art that asked for clear-headed thinking, self-
sacrifice to the State (as in Oath of the
7. Horatii) and an austerity reminiscent of Republican Rome.
Jacques-Louis David, Oath of the Horatii, 1784 (salon of 1785)
oil on canvas, 3.3 x 4.25m (Louvre)
Neoclassicism is characterized by clarity of form, sober colors,
shallow space, strong horizontal
and verticals that render that subject matter timeless (instead of
temporal as in the dynamic
Baroque works), and Classical subject matter (or classicizing
contemporary subject matter).
Romanticism
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 362
Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakwood, 1809-10,
oil on canvas, 110 x 171 cm (Alte Nationalgalerie,
Berlin)
As is fairly common with stylistic rubrics, the word
“Romanticism” was not developed to describe
the visual arts but was first used in relation to new literary and
musical schools in the beginning
of the 19th century. Art came under this heading only later.
Think of the Romantic literature and
musical compositions of the early 19th century: the poetry of
Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, and
William Wordsworth and the scores of Beethoven, Richard
8. Strauss, and Chopin—these
Romantic poets and musicians associated with visual artists. A
good example of this is the
friendship between composer and pianist Frederic Chopin and
painter Eugene Delacroix.
Romantic artists were concerned with the spectrum and intensity
of human emotion.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 363
Eugene Delacroix, Liberty leading the People, 1830, oil on
canvas, 260 x 325 cm (Louvre, Paris)
Even if you do not regularly listen to classical music, you’ve
heard plenty of music by these
composers. In his epic film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, the late
director Stanley Kubrick used
Strauss’s Thus Spake Zarathustra (written in 1896, Strauss
based his composition on Friedrich
Nietzsche’s book of the same name, listen to it here). Kubrick’s
A Clockwork Orange similarly
uses the sweeping ecstasy and drama of Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony, in this case to intensify
the cinematic violence of the film.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Richard_Strauss_-
_Also_Sprach_Zarathustra.ogg
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
9. Centuries 364
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, Saturn Devouring One Of His
Sons, 1821-1823, 143.5 x 81.4 cm (Prado, Madrid)
Romantic music expressed the powerful drama of human
emotion: anger and passion, but also
quiet passages of pleasure and joy. So too, the French painter
Eugene Delacroix and the
Spanish artist Francisco Goya broke with the cool, cerebral
idealism of David and Ingres’ Neo-
Classicism. They sought instead to respond to the cataclysmic
upheavals that characterized their
era with line, color, and brushwork that was more physically
direct, more emotionally expressive.
Realism
The Royal Academy supported the age-old belief that art should
be instructive, morally uplifting,
refined, inspired by the classical tradition, a good reflection of
the national culture, and, above all,
about beauty.
But trying to keep young nineteenth-century artists’ eyes on the
past became an issue!
The world was changing rapidly, and some artists wanted their
work to be about their
contemporary environment—about themselves and their own
perceptions of life. In short, they
believed that the modern era deserved to have a modern art.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
10. Centuries 365
The Modern Era begins with the Industrial Revolution in the
late eighteenth century. Clothing,
food, heat, light and sanitation are a few of the basic areas that
“modernized” the nineteenth
century. Transportation was faster, getting things done got
easier, shopping in the new
department stores became an adventure, and people developed a
sense of “leisure time”—thus
the entertainment businesses grew.
Paris transformed
In Paris, the city was transformed from a medieval warren of
streets to a grand urban center with
wide boulevards, parks, shopping districts and multi-class
dwellings (so that the division of class
might be from floor to floor—the rich on the lower floors and
the poor on the upper floors in one
building—instead by neighborhood).
Therefore, modern life was about social mixing, social mobility,
frequent journeys from the city to
the country and back, and a generally faster pace which has
accelerated ever since.
Gustave Courbet, Les Demoiselles du bord de la Seine (Young
Ladies on the Banks of the Seine), 1856, oil on
canvas, 174 x 206 cm (Musée du Petit, Palais)
11. Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 366
How could paintings and sculptures about classical gods and
biblical stories relate to a
population enchanted with this progress?
In the middle of the nineteenth century, the young artists
decided that it couldn’t and shouldn’t. In
1863 the poet and art critic Charles Baudelaire published an
essay entitled “The Painter of
Modern Life,” which declared that the artist must be of his/her
own time.
Courbet
Gustave Courbet, A Burial at Ornans, 1849-50, oil on canvas,
314 x 663 cm (Musee d’Orsay, Paris)
Gustave Courbet, a young fellow from the Franche-Comté, a
province outside of Paris, came to
the “big city” with a large ego and a sense of mission. He met
Baudelaire and other progressive
thinkers within the first years of making Paris his home. Then,
he set himself up as the leader for
a new art: Realism— “history painting” about real life. He
believed that if he could not see
something, he should not paint it. He also decided that his art
should have a social
consciousness that would awaken the self-involved Parisian to
contemporary concerns: the
good, the bad and the ugly.
12. Édouard Manet
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 367
Édouard Manet, Olympia, 1863, oil on canvas, 130 x 190 cm
(Musée d’Orsay, Paris)
Manet’s complaint—” They are raining insults upon me!” to his
friend Charles Baudelaire pointed
to the overwhelming negative response his painting Olympia
received from critics in 1865.
Baudelaire (an art critic and poet) had advocated for an ar t that
could capture the “gait, glance,
and gesture” of modern life, and, although Manet’s painting had
perhaps done just that, its debut
at the salon only served to bewilder and scandalize the Parisian
public.
Manet had created an artistic revolution: a contemporary subject
depicted in a modern manner. It
is hard from a present-day perspective to see what all the fuss
was about. Nevertheless, the
painting elicited much unease and it is important to remember —
in the absence of the profusion
of media imagery that exists today—that painting and sculpture
in nineteenth-century France
served to consolidate identity on both a national and individual
level. And here is where the
Olympia’s subversive role resides. Manet chose not to mollify
anxiety about this new modern
world of which Paris had become a symbol. For those anxious
about class status (many had
13. recently moved to Paris from the countryside), the naked woman
in Olympia coldly stared back
at the new urban bourgeoisie looking to art to solidify their own
sense of identity. Aside from the
reference to prostitution—itself a dangerous sign of the
emerging margins in the modern city—
the painting’s inclusion of a black woman tapped into the
French colonialist mindset while
providing a stark contrast for the whiteness of Olympia. The
black woman also served as a
powerful emblem of “primitive” sexuality, one of many fictions
that aimed to justify colonial views
of non-Western societies.
Impressionism
https://smarthistory.org/haussmann-the-demolisher-and-the-
creation-of-modern-paris/
https://smarthistory.org/orientalism/
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 368
Claude Monet, Impression Sunrise, 1872, oil on canvas, 48 x 63
cm (Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris). This painting
was exhibited at the first Impressionist exhibition in 1874.
Apart from the salon
The group of artists who became known as the Impressionists
did something ground-breaking in
addition to painting their sketchy, light-filled canvases: they
established their own exhibition. This
14. may not seem like much in an era like ours, when art galleries
are everywhere in major cities, but
in Paris at this time, there was one official, state-sponsored
exhibition—called the Salon—and
very few art galleries devoted to the work of living artists. For
most of the nineteenth century
then, the Salon was the only way to exhibit your work (and
therefore the only way to establish
your reputation and make a living as an artist). The works
exhibited at the Salon were chosen by
a jury—which could often be quite arbitrary. The artists we
know today as Impressionists—
Claude Monet, August Renoir, Edgar Degas, Berthe Morisot,
Alfred Sisley (and several others)—
could not afford to wait for France to accept their work. They
all had experienced rejection by the
Salon jury in recent years and felt that waiting an entire year
between exhibitions was too long.
They needed to show their work and they wanted to sell it.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 369
Edgar Degas, The Ballet Class, 1871-1874, oil on canvas, 75 x
85 cm (Musée d’Orsay, Paris)
The artists pooled their money, rented a studio that belonged to
the photographer Nadar, and set
a date for their first collective exhibition. They called
themselves the Anonymous Society of
Painters, Sculptors, and Printmakers and their first show opened
at about the same time as the
15. annual Salon in May 1874. The Impressionists held eight
exhibitions from 1874 through 1886.
Lack of finish
Monet, Renoir, Degas, and Sisley had met through classes.
Berthe Morisot was a friend of both
Degas and Manet (she would marry Édouard Manet’s brother
Eugène by the end of 1874). She
had been accepted to the Salon, but her work had become more
experimental since then. Degas
invited Morisot to join their risky effort. The first exhibition
did not repay the artists monetarily, but
it did draw the critics, some of whom decided their art was
abominable. What they saw wasn’t
finished in their eyes; these were mere “impressions.” This was
not a compliment.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 370
Berthe Morisot, The Cradle, 1872, oil on canvas, 56 x 46 cm
(Musée d’Orsay, Paris)
The paintings of Neoclassical and Romantic artists had a
finished appearance. The
Impressionists’ completed works looked like sketches, fast and
preliminary “impressions” that
artists would dash off to preserve an idea of what to paint more
carefully at a later date.
Normally, an artist’s “impressions” were not meant to be sold
but were meant to be aids for the
16. memory—to take these ideas back to the studio for the
masterpiece on canvas. The critics
thought it was absurd to sell paintings that looked like slap-dash
impressions and to present
these paintings as finished works.
Landscape and contemporary life
Courbet, Manet and the Impressionists also challenged the
Academy’s category codes. The
Academy deemed that only “history painting” was great
painting. These young Realists and
Impressionists questioned the long-established hierarchy of
subject matter. They believed that
landscapes and genres scenes (scenes of contemporary life)
were worthy and important.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 371
Claude Monet, Coquelicots, La promenade (Poppies), 1873, 50
x 65 cm (Musée d’Orsay, Paris)
Light and color
In their landscapes and genre scenes, the Impressionist tried to
arrest a particular moment in
time by pinpointing specific atmospheric conditions—light
flickering on water, moving clouds, a
burst of rain. Their technique tried to capture what they saw.
They painted small commas of pure
color one next to another. When a viewer stood at a reasonable
17. distance their eyes would see a
mix of individual marks; colors that had blended optically. This
method created more vibrant
colors than colors mixed as physical paint on a palette.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 372
Claude Monet, La Gare Saint-Lazare, 1877, oil on canvas, 75 x
104 cm (Musée d’Orsay, Paris)
An important aspect of the Impressionist painting was the
appearance of quickly shifting light on
the surface of forms and the representation of changing
atmospheric conditions. The
Impressionists wanted to create an art that was modern by
capturing the rapid pace of
contemporary life and the fleeting conditions of light. They
painted outdoors (en plein air) to
capture the appearance of the light as it flickered and faded
while they worked.
Post-Impressionism
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 373
Vincent van Gogh, The Starry Night, 1889, oil on canvas, 73.7 x
92.1 cm (The Museum of Modern Art)
18. Vincent van Gogh: A rare night landscape
The curving, swirling lines of hills, mountains, and sky, the
brilliantly contrasting blues and
yellows, the large, flame-like cypress trees, and the thickly
layered brushstrokes of Vincent van
Gogh’s The Starry Night are ingrained in the minds of many as
an expression of the artist’s
turbulent state-of-mind. Van Gogh’s canvas is indeed an
exceptional work of art, not only in
terms of its quality but also within the artist’s oeuvre, since in
comparison to favored subjects like
irises, sunflowers, or wheat fields, night landscapes are rare.
Nevertheless, it is surprising that
The Starry Night has become so well known. Van Gogh
mentioned it briefly in his letters as a
simple “study of night” or “night effect.”
His brother Theo, manager of a Parisian art gallery and a gifted
connoisseur of contemporary art,
was unimpressed, telling Vincent, “I clearly sense what
preoccupies you in the new canvases
like the village in the moonlight… but I feel that the search for
style takes away the real
sentiment of things” (813, 22 October 1889). Although Theo
van Gogh felt that the painting
ultimately pushed style too far at the expense of true emotive
substance, the work has become
iconic of individualized expression in modern landscape
painting.
Arguably, it is this rich mixture of invention, remembrance, and
observation combined with Van
Gogh’s use of simplified forms, thick impasto, and boldly
contrasting colors that has made the
19. work so compelling to subsequent generations of viewers as
well as to other artists. Inspiring
and encouraging others is precisely what Van Gogh sought to
achieve with his night scenes.
When Starry Night over the Rhône (image below) was exhibited
at the Salon des Indépendants,
an important and influential venue for vanguard artists in Paris,
in 1889, Vincent told Theo he
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 374
hoped that it “might give others the idea of doing night effects
better than I do.” The Starry Night,
his own subsequent “night effect,” became a foundational image
for Expressionism as well as
perhaps the most famous painting in Van Gogh’s oeuvre.
Vincent van Gogh, Starry Night over the Rhone, 1888, oil on
canvas, 72 x 92 cm (Musée d’Orsay)
Paul Cézanne
Paul Cézanne, Still Life with Apples, 1895-98, oil on canvas,
68.6 x 92.7 cm (The Museum of Modern Art, New York)
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 375
20. Categorizing the style of Paul Cézanne’s (Say-zahn) artwork is
problematic. As a young man he
left his home in Provence in the south of France in order to join
with the avant-garde in Paris. He
was successful, too. He fell in with the circle of young painters
that surrounded Manet, he had
been a childhood friend of the novelist, Emile Zola, who
championed Manet, and he even
showed at the first Impressionist exhibition, held at Nadar’s
studio in 1874.
Paul Cézanne, Paul Alexis reading to Émile Zola, 1869-1870,
oil on canvas (São Paulo Museum of Art)
However, Cézanne didn’t quite fit in with the group. Whereas
many other painters in this circle
were concerned primarily with the effects of light and reflected
color, Cézanne remained deeply
committed to form. Feeling out of place in Paris, he left after a
relatively short period and
returned to his home in Aix-en-Provence. He would remain in
his native Provence for most of the
rest of his life. He worked in the semi-isolation afforded by the
country but was never really out of
touch with the breakthroughs of the avant-garde.
Like the Impressionists, he often worked outdoors directly
before his subjects. But unlike the
Impressionists, Cézanne used color, not as an end in itself, but
rather like line, as a tool with
which to construct form and space. Ironically, it is the Parisian
avant-garde that would eventually
seek him out. In the first years of the 20th century, just at the
end of Cézanne’s life, young artists
21. would make a pilgrimage to Aix, to see the man who would
change painting.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 376
Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, c. 1887, oil on canvas,
66.8 x 92.3 cm (Courtauld Institute of Art, London)
Paul Cézanne is often considered to be one of the most
influential painters of the late 19th
century. Pablo Picasso readily admitted his great debt to the
elder master. Similarly, Henri
Matisse once called Cézanne, “…the father of us all.” For many
years The Museum of Modern
Art in New York organized its permanent collection so as to
begin with an entire room devoted to
Cézanne’s painting. The Metropolitan Museum of Art also gives
over an entire large room to him.
Clearly, many artists and curators consider him enormously
important.
Japan’s Edo Period (1615-1868) and the art of Ukiyo-e
The genre of ukiyo-e (literally translatable as “pictures of the
floating world”) comprises paintings
and prints, though woodblock prints were its main medium. It
flourished in the 18th and 19th
centuries, supported by Japan’s middle class. Ukiyo-e works
were collaborations between
painters, publishers, carvers, and printers, with subject matter
drawn from the transitory (thus
“floating”), but enjoyable worlds of pleasure quarters, the
22. popular theater, and urban life,
especially the streets of Edo (the most powerful city in Japan
from the seventeenth to the
nineteenth century. Renamed Tokyo in 1868). Ukiyo-e also
featured parodies of classical themes
set in contemporaneous circumstances.
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 377
Utagawa Kunisada I (Toyokuni III), Visiting Komachi (Kayoi
Komachi) (detail), from the series Modern Beauties as
the Seven Komachi (Tōsei Bijin Nana Komachi), c. 1821-22,
published by Kawaguchiya Uhei (Fukusendō),
woodblock print: ink and color on paper, 36.5 x 25.5 cm
(Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)
In the print above titled Visiting Komachi by Utagawa Kunisada
I, the empty carriage helps us
identify that the specific story being illustrated, is the one
known as “Visiting Komachi” (Kayoi
Komachi). According to legend, Komachi, renowned for her
beauty and talent, attracted the
attention of many suitors, including General Fukakusa, who
sought to become her lover.
Komachi tested his devotion by asking him to spend 100 nights
outside her door, in the garden,
irrespective of weather conditions. He agreed and marked each
night on the shaft of her carriage
but died on the last night because of the harsh winter. The scene
illustrated in Kunisada’s print
23. may be from the very end of the story, when Komachi learns
about his death and goes to see the
carriage. Other versions of this story circulated orally in Japan
over the centuries, and some
were used as plotlines for plays in the Japanese Noh tradition of
musical drama.
Katsushika Hokusai’s Under the Wave off Kanagawa, also
called The Great Wave has become
one of the most famous works of art in the world—and
debatably the most iconic work of
https://www.mfa.org/collections/object/visiting-kayoi-from-the-
series-modern-beauties-as-the-seven-komachi-t%C3%B4sei-
bijin-nana-komachi-246562
Introduction to Art Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries 378
Japanese art. Initially, thousands of copies of this print were
quickly produced and sold cheaply.
Despite the fact that it was created at a time when Japanese
trade was heavily restricted,
Hokusai’s print displays the influence of Dutch art, and proved
to be inspirational for many artists
working in Europe later in the nineteenth century.
Katsushika Hokusai, Under the Wave off Kanagawa (Kanagawa
oki nami ura), also known as The Great Wave, from
the series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku sanjūrokkei),
c. 1830-32, polychrome woodblock print, ink and
color on paper, 10 1/8 x 14 15 /16″ / 25.7 x 37.9 cm (The
24. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
Beginning in 1640, Japan was largely closed off to the world
and only limited interaction with
China and Holland was allowed. This changed in the 1850s,
when trade was forced open by
American naval commodore, Matthew C. Perry. After this, there
was a flood of Japanese visual
culture into the West. At the 1867 International Exposition in
Paris, Hokusai’s work was on view
at the Japanese pavilion. This was the first introduction of
Japanese culture to mass audiences
in the West, and a craze for collecting art called Japonisme
ensued. Additionally, Impressionist
artists in Paris, such as Claude Monet, were great fans of
Japanese prints. The flattening of
space, an interest in atmospheric conditions, and the
impermanence of modern city life—all
visible in Hokusai’s prints—both reaffirmed their own artistic
interests and inspired many future
works of art.
License and Attributions
Chapter 27: Eighteenth and Nineteenth CenturiesThe Asante
Kingdom of West AfricaEurope and the Age of
EnlightenmentThe French Revolution and
NeoclassicismRomanticismRealismParis
transformedCourbetÉdouard ManetImpressionismApart from the
salonLack of finishLandscape and contemporary lifeLight and
colorPost-ImpressionismVincent van Gogh: A rare night
landscapePaul CézanneJapan’s Edo Period (1615-1868) and the
art of Ukiyo-e
10
AMERICA’S ECONOMIC REVOLUTION
25. · THE CHANGING AMERICAN POPULATION
· TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
REVOLUTIONS
· COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY
· MEN AND WOMEN AT WORK
· PATTERNS OF SOCIETY
· THE AGRICULTURAL NORTH
LOOKING AHEAD
1. What were the factors sparking the U.S. economic revolution
of the mid-nineteenth century?
2. How did the U.S. population change between 1820 and 1840,
and how did the population change affect the nation’s economy,
society, and politics?
3. Why did America’s Industrial Revolution affect the northern
economy and society differently than it did the southern
economy and society?
WHEN THE UNITED STATES ENTERED the War of 1812, it
was still an essentially agrarian nation. There were, to be sure,
some substantial cities in America and also modest but growing
manufacturing centers, mainly in the Northeast. But the
overwhelming majority of Americans were farmers and
tradespeople.
By the time the Civil War began in 1861, however, the United
States had transformed itself. Most Americans were still rural
people. But even most farmers were now part of a national, and
even international, market economy. Equally important, the
United States was starting to challenge the industrial nations of
Europe for supremacy in manufacturing. The nation had
experienced the beginning of its own Industrial Revolution.THE
CHANGING AMERICAN POPULATION
The American Industrial Revolution was a result of many
factors: advances in transportation and communications, the
growth of manufacturing technology, the development of new
systems of business organization, and perhaps above all,
surging population growth.
26. Population Trends
Three trends characterized the American population during
the antebellum period: rapid increase, movement westward, and
the growth of towns and cities where demand for work was
expanding.
The American population, 4 million in 1790, had reached 10
million by 1820 and 17 million by 1840. Improvements in
public health played a role in this growth. Epidemics declined
in both frequency and intensity, and the death rate as a whole
dipped. But the population increase was also a result of a high
birthrate. In 1840, white women bore an average of 6.14
children each.
The African American population increased more slowly than
the white population. After 1808, when the importation of
slaves became illegal, the proportion of blacks to whites in the
nation as a whole steadily declined. The slower increase of the
black population was also a result of its comparatively high
death rate. Slave mothers had large families, but life was
shorter for both slaves and free blacks than for whites—a result
of the enforced poverty and harsh working conditions in which
virtually all African Americans lived.
Immigration, choked off by wars in Europe and economic crises
in America, contributed little to the American population in the
first three decades of the Page 229nineteenth century. Of the
total 1830 population of nearly 13 million, the foreign-born
numbered fewer than 500,000. Soon, however, immigration
began to grow once again. Famine and political unrest in
European countries fueled people’s desire to emigrate, while the
transatlantic voyage became quicker and more affordable as
steamships replaced older ships powered by wind alone.
Much of this new European immigration flowed into the rapidly
growing cities of the Northeast. But urban growth was a result
of substantial internal migration as well. As agriculture in New
England and other areas grew less profitable, more and more
people picked up stakes and moved—some to promising
agricultural regions in the West, but many to eastern cities.
27. Immigration and Urban Growth, 1840–1860
The growth of cities accelerated dramatically between 1840 and
1860. The population of New York, for example, rose from
312,000 to 805,000, making it the nation’s largest and most
commercially important city. Philadelphia’s population grew
over the same twenty-year period from 220,000 to 565,000;
Boston’s, from 93,000 to 177,000. By 1860, 26 percent of the
population of the free states was living in towns (places of
2,500 people or more) or cities, up from 14 percent in 1840. The
urban population of the South, by contrast, increased from 6
percent in 1840 to only 10 percent in 1860.
The booming agricultural economy of the West produced
significant urban growth as well. Between 1820 and 1840,
communities that had once been small villages or trading posts
became major cities: St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati,
Louisville. All became centers of the growing carrying trade
that connected the farmers of the Midwest with New Orleans
and, through it, the cities of the Northeast. After 1830,
however, an increasing proportion of this trade moved from the
Mississippi River to the Great Lakes, creating such important
new port cities as Buffalo, Detroit, Milwaukee, and Chicago,
which gradually overtook the river ports.
Immigration from Europe swelled. Between 1840 and 1850,
more than 1.5 million Europeans moved to America. In the
1850s, the number rose to 2.5 million. Almost half the residents
of New York City in the 1850s were recent immigrants. In St.
Louis, Chicago, and Milwaukee, the foreign-born outnumbered
those of native birth. Comparatively few immigrants settled in
the South.
The newcomers came from many different countries, but the
overwhelming majority were from Ireland and Germany. By
1860, there were more than 1.5 million Irish-born and
approximately 1 million German-born people in the United
States. Many of the Irish were rural farmers escaping brutal
poverty, British rule, and especially the Potato Famine that,
28. from 1845 to 1852, rotted crops, caused widespread starvation,
and helped spread disease. It killed nearly one million Irish.
Most Irish immigrants abandoned their agricultural roots and
stayed in the very eastern cities where they landed, becoming
part of the unskilled labor force. The largest group of Irish
immigrants comprised young, single women, who typically
worked in factories or as domestics. Like the Irish, many
German-speaking immigrants hungered for improved
agricultural conditions, especially when wheat prices
plummeted. But others came for explicitly political reasons.
Many fled Europe in search of democracy after the failed
revolutions of 1848. And those who were Jewish hoped to leave
behind increasing anti-Semitism. Germans tended to arrive in
America with more money and often came in family groups.
They generally moved on to the Northwest, where they
established farms or opened businesses.Page 230
The Rise of Nativism
Many politicians, particularly Democrats, eagerly courted the
support of the new arrivals. Other citizens, however, viewed the
growing foreign population with alarm. Some people argued
that the immigrants were racially inferior or that they corr upted
politics by selling their votes. Others complained that they were
stealing jobs from the native workforce. Protestants worried that
the growing Irish population would increase the power of the
Catholic Church in America. Older-stock Americans feared that
immigrants would become a radical force in politics. Out of
these fears and prejudices emerged a number of secret societies
to combat the “alien menace.”
The first was the Native American Association, founded in
1837, which in 1845 became the Native American Party. In
1850, it joined with other groups supporting nativism to form
the Supreme Order of the Star-Spangled Banner, whose demands
included banning Catholics or aliens from holding public office,
enacting more restrictive naturalization laws, and establishing
literacy tests for voting. The order adopted a strict code of
29. secrecy, which included a secret password: “I know nothing.”
Ultimately, members of the movement came to be known as
the “Know-Nothings.”
After the 1852 elections, the Know-Nothings created a new
political organization that they called the American Party. It
scored an immediate and astonishing success in the elections of
1854. The Know-Nothings did well in Pennsylvania and New
York and actually won control of the state government in
Massachusetts. Outside the Northeast, however, their progress
was more modest. After 1854, the strength of the Know-
Nothings declined, and the party soon
disappeared.TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
REVOLUTIONS
Page 231Just as the Industrial Revolution required an expanding
population, it also required an efficient system of transportation
and communications. The first half of the nineteenth century
saw dramatic changes in both.
The Canal Age
From 1790 until the 1820s, the so-called turnpike era, the
United States had relied largely on roads for internal
transportation. But roads alone were not adequate for the
nation’s expanding needs. And so, in the 1820s and 1830s,
Americans began to turn to other means of transportation as
well.
Larger rivers like the Mississippi became increasingly important
as steamboats replaced the slow barges that had previously
dominated water traffic. The new riverboats carried the corn
and wheat of northwestern farmers and the cotton and tobacco
of southwestern planters to New Orleans, where oceangoing
ships took the cargoes on to eastern ports or abroad.
But this roundabout river–sea route satisfied neither western
farmers nor eastern merchants, who wanted a new way to ship
goods cheaper and more directly to the urban markets and ports
of the Atlantic Coast. New highways across the mountains
provided a partial solution to the problem. But the costs of
30. hauling goods overland, although lower than before, were still
too Page 232high for anything except the most compact and
valuable merchandise. And so interest grew in building canals—
human-made waterways that connected bodies of water and
were wide and deep enough for commercial vessels.
The job of financing canals fell largely to the states. New York
was the first to act. It had the natural advantage of a good land
route between the Hudson River and Lake Erie through the only
break in the Appalachian chain. But the engineering tasks were
still imposing. The more than 350-mile-long route was
interrupted by high ridges and thick woods. After a long public
debate, canal advocates prevailed, and digging began on July 4,
1817.
The Erie Canal was the greatest construction project Americans
had ever undertaken. The canal itself was basically a simple
ditch forty feet wide and four feet deep, with towpaths along the
banks for the horses or mules that were to draw the canal boats.
But its construction involved hundreds of difficult cuts and fills
to enable the canal to pass through hills and over valleys, stone
aqueducts to carry it across streams, and eighty-eight locks of
heavy masonry with great wooden gates to permit ascents and
descents. Still, the Erie Canal opened in October 1825 amid
elaborate ceremonies and celebrations, and traffic was soon so
heavy that within about seven years, tolls had repaid the entire
cost of construction. By providing a route to the Great Lakes,
the canal gave New York access to Chicago and the growing
markets of the West. The Erie Canal also contributed to the
decline of agriculture in New England. Now that it was so much
cheaper for western farmers to ship their crops east, people
farming marginal land in the Northeast found themselves unable
to compete.
The system of water transportation extended farther when Ohio
and Indiana, inspired by the success of the Erie Canal, provided
water connections between Lake Erie and the Ohio River. These
canals made it possible to ship goods by inland waterways all
the way from New York to New Orleans.
31. CANALS IN THE NORTH, 1823–1860Note how the East and
West are being connected through a growing transportation
network. The great success of the Erie Canal, which opened in
1825, inspired decades of energetic canal building in many
areas of the United States, as this map illustrates. But none of
the new canals had anything like the impact of the original Erie
Canal, and thus none of New York’s competitors—among them
Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Boston—were able to displace it as
the nation’s leading commercial center.
How did the emergence of canals change the distribution of
goods in America?
One of the immediate results of these new transportation routes
was increased white settlement in the Northwest, because it was
now easier for migrants to make the westward journey and to
ship their goods back to eastern markets. Much of the western
produce continued to go downriver to New Orleans, but an
increasing proportion went east to New York. And
manufactured goods from throughout the East now moved in
growing volume through New York and then to the West via the
new water routes.
Rival cities along the Atlantic seaboard took alarm at New
York’s access to (and control over) so vast a market, largely at
their expense. But they had limited success in catching up.
Boston, its way to the Hudson River blocked by the Berkshire
Mountains, did not even try to connect itself to the West by
canal. Philadelphia, Baltimore, Richmond, and Charleston all
aspired to build water routes to the Ohio Valley but never
completed them. Some cities, however, saw opportunities in a
different and newer means of transportation. Even before the
canal age had reached its height, the era of the railroad was
beginning.
The Early Railroads
Railroads played a relatively small role in the nation’s
33. points by great iron bridges. Chicago eventually became the rail
center of the West, securing its place as the dominant city of
that region.
The emergence of the great train lines diverted traffic from the
main water routes—the Erie Canal and the Mississippi River.
By lessening the dependence of the West on the Mississippi, the
railroads also helped weaken further the connection between the
Northwest and the South.
Railroad construction required massive amounts of capital.
Some came from private sources, but much of it came from
government funding. State and local governments invested in
railroads, but even greater assistance came from the federal
government in the form of public land grants. By 1860,
Congress had allotted over 30 million acres to eleven states to
assist railroad construction.
It would be difficult to exaggerate the impact of the rails on the
American economy, on American society, even on American
culture. Where railroads went, towns, ranches, and farms grew
up rapidly along their routes. Areas once cut off from markets
during winter found that the railroad could transport goods to
and from them year-round. Most of all, the railroads cut the
time of shipment and travel. In the 1830s, traveling from New
York to Chicago by lake and canal took roughly three weeks. By
railroad in the 1850s, the same trip took less than two days.
The railroads were much more than a fast and economically
attractive form of transportation. They were also a breeding
ground for technological advances, a key to the nation’s
economic growth, and the birthplace of the modern corporate
form of organization. They became a symbol of the nation’s
technological prowess. To many people, railroads were the most
visible sign of American advancement and greatness.Page 234
RAILROAD GROWTH, 1850–1860These two maps illustrate
the dramatic growth of American railroads in the 1850s. Note
the particularly extensive increase in mileage in the upper
Midwest (known at the time as the Old Northwest). Note, too,
34. the relatively smaller increase in railroad mileage in the South.
Railroads forged a close economic relationship between the
upper Midwest and the Northeast and weakened the Midwest’s
relationship with the South.
How did this contribute to the South’s growing sense of
insecurity within the Union?
The Telegraph
What the railroad was to transportation, the telegraph was to
communication—a dramatic advance over traditional method s
and a symbol of national progress and technological expertise.
Before the telegraph, communication over great distances could
be achieved only by direct, physical contact. That meant that
virtually all long-distance communication relied Page 235on the
mail, which traveled first on horseback and coach and later by
railroad. There were obvious disadvantages to this system, not
the least of which was the difficulty in coordinating the railroad
schedules. By the 1830s, experiments with many methods of
improving long-distance communication had been conducted,
among them a procedure for using the sun and reflective devices
to send light signals as far as 187 miles.
In 1832, Samuel F. B. Morse—a professor of art with an interest
in science—began experimenting with a different system.
Fascinated with the possibilities of electricity, Morse set out to
find a way to send signals along an electric cable. Technology
did not yet permit the use of electric wiring to send
reproductions of the human voice or any complex information.
But Morse realized that electricity itself could serve as a
communication device—that pulses of electricity could
themselves become a kind of language. He experimented at first
with a numerical code, in which each number would represent a
word on a list available to recipients. Gradually, however, he
became convinced of the need to find a more universal
telegraphic “language,” and he developed what became
the Morse code, in which alternating long and short bursts of
electric current would represent individual letters.
36. relied on the cumbersome exchange of newspapers by mail, now
it was possible for papers to share their reporting. In 1846,
newspaper publishers from around the nation formed the
Associated Press to promote cooperative news gathering by
wire.
Other technological advances spurred the development of the
American press. In 1846, Richard Hoe invented the steam-
powered cylinder rotary press, making it possible to print
newspapers much more rapidly and cheaply than had been
possible in the past. Among other things, the rotary press
spurred the dramatic growth of mass-circulation newspapers.
The New York Sun, the most widely circulated paper in the
nation, had 8,000 readers in 1834. By 1860, its successful rival
the New York Herald—benefiting from the speed and economies
of production the rotary press made possible—had a circulation
of 77,000.COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY
By the mid-nineteenth century, the United States had developed
the beginnings of a modern capitalist economy and an advanced
industrial capacity. But the economy had developed along
highly unequal lines—benefiting some classes and some regions
far more than others.
The Expansion of Business, 1820–1840
American business grew rapidly in the 1820s and 1830s in part
because of important innovations in management. Individuals or
limited partnerships continued to operate most businesses, and
the dominant figures were still the great merchant capitalists,
who generally had sole ownership of their enterprises. In some
larger businesses, however, the individual merchant capitalist
was giving way to the corporation. Corporations, which had the
advantage of combining the resources of a large number of
shareholders, began to develop particularly rapidly in the 1830s,
when some legal obstacles to their formation were removed.
Previously, a corporation could obtain a charter only by a
special act of a state legislature; by the 1830s, states began
passing general incorporation laws, under which a group could
37. secure a charter merely by paying a fee. The laws also permitted
a system of limited liability, in which individual stockholders
risked losing only the value of their own investment—and not
the corporation’s larger losses as in the past—if the enterprise
failed. These changes made possible much larger manufacturing
and business enterprises.Page 237
The Emergence of the Factory
The most profound economic development in mid-nineteenth-
century America was the rise of the factory. Before the War of
1812, most manufacturing took place within households or in
small workshops. Later in the nineteenth century, however, New
England textile manufacturers began using new water-powered
machines that allowed them to bring their operations together
under a single roof. This factory system, as it came to be
known, soon penetrated the shoe industry and other industries
as well.
Between 1840 and 1860, American industry experienced
particularly dramatic growth. For the first time, the value of
manufactured goods was roughly equal to that of agricultural
products. More than half of the approximately 140,000
manufacturing establishments in the country in 1860, including
most of the larger enterprises, were located in the Northeast.
The Northeast thus produced more than two-thirds of the
manufactured goods and employed nearly three-quarters of the
men and women working in manufacturing.
Advances in Technology
Even the most highly developed industries were still relatively
immature. American cotton manufacturers, for example,
produced goods of coarse grade; fine items continued to come
from England. But by the 1840s, significant advances were
occurring.
Among the most important was in the manufacturing of machine
tools—the tools used to make machinery parts. The government
supported much of the research and development of machine
38. tools, often in connection with supplying the military. For
example, a government armory in Springfield, Massachusetts,
developed two important tools—the turret lathe (used for
cutting screws and other metal parts) and the universal milling
machine (which replaced the hand chiseling of complicated
parts and dies)—early in the nineteenth century. The precision
grinder (which became critical to, among other things, the
construction of sewing machines) was designed in the 1850s to
help the army produce standardized rifle parts. By the 1840s,
the machine tools used in the factories of the Northeast were
already better than those in most European factories.
One important result of better machine tools was that the
principle of interchangeable parts spread into many industries.
Eventually, interchangeability would revolutionize watch and
clock making, the manufacturing of locomotives, the creation of
steam engines, and the making of many farm tools and guns. It
would also help make possible bicycles, sewing machines,
typewriters, cash registers, and eventually the automobile.
Industrialization was also profiting from new sources of energy.
The production of coal, most of it mined around Pittsburgh in
western Pennsylvania, leaped from 50,000 tons in 1820 to 14
million tons in 1860. The new power source, which replaced
wood and water power, made it possible to locate mills away
from running streams and thus permitted the wider expansion of
the industry.
The great industrial advances owed much to American
inventors. In 1830, the number of inventions patented was 544;
in 1860, it stood at 4,778. Several industries provide
particularly vivid examples of how a technological innovation
could produce major economic change. In 1839, Charles
Goodyear, a New England hardware merchant, discovered a
method of vulcanizing rubber (treating it to give it greater
strength and elasticity); by 1860, his process had found over
500 uses and had helped create a major American rubber
industry. In 1846, Elias Howe of Massachusetts constructed a
sewing machine; Isaac Singer made improvements on it, and the
39. Howe-Singer machine was soon being used in the manufacture
of ready-to-wear clothing.Page 238
Industrialization was not without environmental costs, however.
It brought unprecedented levels of water and air pollution that
eventually triggered early efforts at reform and contributed to
growing public awareness about the need to protect the
environment and citizens. To stop toxic runoff from cattle
processing plants, for example, Wisconsin passed the
Slaughterhouse Offal Act of 1862 that prohibited dumping
slaughter wastes in surface water. By 1861 Chicago and
Cincinnati had both implemented smoke laws aimed at
decreasing the soot, ash, and heavy smog produced by coal and
iron factories, railroads, and ships.
THE ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS OF
INDUSTRIALIZATIONNineteenth-century factories like this
print works in Manchester contributed to unprecedented levels
of air pollution.
(Source: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division
[LC-USZ62-69112])
Rise of the Industrial Ruling Class
The merchant capitalists remained figures of importance in the
1840s. In such cities as New York, Philadelphia, and Boston,
influential mercantile groups operated shipping lines to
southern ports or dispatched fleets of trading vessels to Europe
and Asia. But merchant capitalism was declining by the middle
of the century. This was partly because British competitors were
stealing much of America’s export trade, but mostly because
there were greater opportunities for profit in manufacturing than
in trade. That was one reason why industries developed first in
the Northeast: an affluent merchant class with the money and
the will to finance them already existed there. They supported
the emerging industrial capitalists and soon became the new
aristocrats of the Northeast, with far-reaching economic and
political influence.MEN AND WOMEN AT WORK
40. In the 1820s and 1830s, factory labor came primarily from the
native-born population. After 1840, the growing immigrant
population became the most important new source of workers.
Recruiting a Native Workforce
Recruiting a labor force was not an easy task in the early years
of the factory system. Ninety percent of the American people in
the 1820s still lived and worked on farms. Many urban residents
were skilled artisans who owned and managed their own shops,
and the available unskilled workers were not numerous enough
to meet industry’s needs. But dramatic Page 239improvements
in agricultural production, particularly in the Midwest, meant
that each region no longer had to feed itself; it could import the
food it needed. As a result, rural people from relatively
unprofitable farming areas of the East began leaving the land to
work in the factories.
Two systems of recruitment emerged to bring this new labor
supply to the expanding textile mills. One, common in the mid-
Atlantic states, brought whole families from the farm to work
together in the mill. The second system, common in
Massachusetts and New England in general, enlisted young
women, mostly farmers’ daughters in their late teens and early
twenties. It was known as the Lowell or Waltham system, after
the towns in which it first emerged. Many of these women
worked for several years, saved their wages, and then returned
home to marry and raise children. Others married men they met
in the factories or in town. Most eventually stopped working in
the mills and took up domestic roles instead.
Labor conditions in these early years of the factory system, hard
as they often were, remained significantly better than they
would later become. The Lowell workers, for example,
were generally well fed, carefully supervised, and housed in
clean boardinghouses and dormitories, which the factory owners
maintained. (See “Consider the Source: Handbook to Lowell.”)
Wages for the Lowell workers were relatively generous by the
standards of the time. The women even published a monthly
41. magazine, the Lowell Offering.CONSIDER THE
SOURCEHANDBOOK TO LOWELL (1848)
Strict rules governed the working life of the young women who
worked in the textile mills in Lowell, Massachusetts, in the first
half of the nineteenth century. Equally strict rules regulated
their time away from work (what little leisure time they
enjoyed) in the company-supervised boardinghouses in which
they lived. The excerpts from the Handbook to Lowell from
1848 that follow suggest the tight supervision under which the
Lowell mill girls worked and lived.FACTORY RULES
REGULATIONS TO BE OBSERVED by all persons employed
in the factories of the Hamilton Manufacturing Company. The
overseers are to be always in their rooms at the starting of the
mill, and not absent unnecessarily during working hours. They
are to see that all those employed in their rooms are in their
places in due season, and keep a correct account of their time
and work. They may grant leave of absence to those employed
under them, when they have spare hands to supply their places
and not otherwise, except in cases of absolute necessity.
All persons in the employ of the Hamilton Manufacturing
Company are to observe the regulations of the room where they
are employed. They are not to be absent from their work without
the consent of the overseer, except in cases of sickness, and
then they are to send him word of the cause of their absence.
They are to board in one of the houses of the company and give
information at the counting room, where they board, when they
begin, or, whenever they change their boarding place; and are to
observe the regulations of their boarding-house.
Those intending to leave the employment of the company are to
give at least two weeks’ notice thereof to their overseer.
All persons entering into the employment of the company are
considered as engaged for twelve months, and those who leave
sooner, or do not comply with all these regulations, will not be
entitled to a regular discharge.
The company will not employ anyone who is habitually absent
from public worship on the Sabbath, or known to be guilty of
42. immorality.
A physician will attend once in every month at the counting-
room, to vaccinate all who may need it, free of expense.
Anyone who shall take from the mills or the yard, any yarn,
cloth or other article belonging to the company will be
considered guilty of stealing and be liable to prosecution.
Payment will be made monthly, including board and wages. The
accounts will be made up to the last Saturday but one in every
month, and paid in the course of the following week.
These regulations are considered part of the contract, with
which all persons entering into the employment of the Hamilton
Manufacturing Company, engage to comply.BOARDING-
HOUSE RULES
REGULATIONS FOR THE BOARDING-HOUSES of the
Hamilton Manufacturing Company. The tenants of the boarding-
houses are not to board, or permit any part of their houses to be
occupied by any person, except those in the employ of the
company, without special permission.
They will be considered answerable for any improper conduct in
their houses, and are not to permit their boarders to have
company at unseasonable hours.
The doors must be closed at ten o’clock in the evening, and no
person admitted after that time, without some reasonable
excuse.
The keepers of the boarding-houses must give an account of the
number, names and employment of their boarders, when
required, and report the names of such as are guilty of any
improper conduct, or are not in the regular habit of attending
public worship.
The buildings, and yards about them, must be kept clean and in
good order; and if they are injured, otherwise than from
ordinary use, all necessary repairs will be made, and charged to
the occupant.
The sidewalks, also, in front of the houses, must be kept clean,
and free from snow, which must be removed from them
immediately after it has ceased falling; if neglected, it will be
43. removed by the company at the expense of the tenant.
It is desirable that the families of those who live in the houses,
as well as the boarders, who have not had the kine pox, should
be vaccinated, which will be done at the expense of the
company, for such as wish it.
Some suitable chamber in the house must be reserved, and
appropriated for the use of the sick, so that others may not be
under the necessity of sleeping in the same room.
JOHN AVERY, Agent.UNDERSTAND, ANALYZE, &
EVALUATE
1. What do these rules suggest about the everyday lives of the
mill workers?
2. What do the rules suggest about the company’s attitude
toward the workers? Do the rules offer any protections to the
employees, or are they all geared toward benefiting the
employer?
3. Why would the company enforce such strict rules? Why
would the mill workers accept them?
Source: Handbook to Lowell, 1848.
Yet even these relatively well-treated workers found the
transition from farm life to factory work difficult. Forced to
live among strangers in a regimented environment, many women
had trouble adjusting to the nature of factory work. However
uncomfortable women may have found factory work, they had
few other options. Work in the mills was in many cases
virtually the only alternative to returning to farms that could no
longer support them.
The factory system of Lowell did not, in any case, survive for
long. In the competitive textile market of the 1830s and 1840s,
manufacturers found it difficult to maintain the high living
standards and reasonably attractive working conditions of
before. Wages declined; the hours of work lengthened; the
conditions of the boardinghouses deteriorated. In 1834, mill
workers in Lowell organized a union—the Factory Girls
Association—which staged a strike to protest a 25 percent wage
cut. Two years later, the association struck again—against a
44. rent increase in the boardinghouses. Both strikes failed, and a
recession in 1837 virtually destroyed the organization. Eight
years later, the Lowell women, led by the militant Sarah Bagley,
created the Female Labor Reform Association, which grew to
around 500 members in five months. It was one of the first
American labor organizations created by women. Members
published the Voice of Industry to air their grievances and
political goals, which included a ten-hour day and
improvements in conditions in the mills. The new association
also asked state governments for legislative investigation of
conditions in the mills. Although mill owners reduced the
workday by 30 minutes, larger labor reforms would have to
wait. The association dissolved in 1848 because the character of
the factory workforce was changing again, lessening the
urgency of their demands. Many mill girls were gradually
moving into other occupations: teaching, domestic service, or
homemaking. And textile manufacturers were turning to a less
demanding labor supply: immigrants.
The Immigrant Workforce
The increasing supply of immigrant workers after 1840 was a
boon to manufacturers and other entrepreneurs. These new
workers, because of their growing numbers and their
unfamiliarity with their new country, had even less leverage
than the women they displaced, Page 241and thus they often
experienced far worse working conditions. Poorly paid
construction gangs, made up increasingly of Irish immigrants,
performed the heavy, unskilled work on turnpikes, canals, and
railroads. Many of them lived in flimsy shanties, in grim
conditions that endangered the health of their families (and
reinforced native prejudices toward the “shanty Irish”). Irish
workers began to predominate in the New England textile mills
as well in the 1840s. Employers began paying piece rates rather
than a daily wage and used other devices to speed up production
and exploit the labor force more efficiently. The factories
themselves were becoming large, noisy, unsanitary, and often
45. dangerous places to work; the average workday was extending
to twelve, often fourteen hours; and wages were declining.
Women and children, whatever their skills, earned less than
most men.
The Factory System and the Artisan Tradition
Factories were also displacing the trades of skilled artisans.
Artisans were as much a part of the older, republican vision of
America as sturdy yeoman farmers. Independent craftspeople
clung to a vision of economic life that was very different from
that promoted by the new capitalist class. The artisans embraced
not just the idea of individual, acquisitive success but also a
sense of a “moral community.” Skilled artisans valued their
independence, their stability, and their relative equality within
their economic world.
Some artisans made successful transitions into small-scale
industry. But others found themselves unable to compete with
the new factory-made goods. In the face of this competition,
skilled workers in cities such as Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Boston, and New York formed Page 242societies for mutual aid.
During the 1820s and 1830s, these craft societies began to
combine on a citywide basis and set up central organizations
known as trade unions. In 1834, delegates from six cities
founded the National Trades’ Union, and in 1836, printers and
cordwainers (makers of high-quality shoes and boots) set up
their own national craft unions.
Hostile laws and hostile courts handicapped the unions, as did
the Panic of 1837 and the depression that followed. But some
artisans managed to retain control over their productive lives.
Fighting for Control
Industrial workers made continuous efforts to improve their
lots. They tried, with little success, to persuade state
legislatures to pass laws setting a maximum workday and
regulating child labor. Their greatest legal victory came in
Massachusetts in 1842, when the state supreme court,
46. in Commonwealth v. Hunt, declared that unions were lawful
organizations and that the strike was a lawful weapon. Other
state courts gradually accepted the principles of the
Massachusetts decision, but employers continued to resist.
Virtually all the early craft unions excluded women. As a result,
women began establishing their own, new protective unions in
the 1850s. Like the male craft unions, the female unions had
little power in dealing with employers. They did, however,
serve an important role as mutual aid societies for women
workers.
Many factors combined to inhibit the growth of better working
standards. Among the most important obstacles was the flood
into the country of immigrant laborers, who were usually
willing to work for lower wages than native workers. Because
they were so numerous, manufacturers had little difficulty
replacing disgruntled or striking workers with eager
immigrants. Ethnic divisions often led workers to channel their
resentments into internal bickering among one another rather
than into their shared grievances. Another obstacle was the
sheer strength of the industrial capitalists, who possessed not
only economic but also political and social power.PATTERNS
OF SOCIETY
The Industrial Revolution was making the United States both
dramatically wealthier and increasingly unequal. It was
transforming social relationships at almost every level.
The Rich and the Poor
The commercial and industrial growth of the United States
greatly elevated the average income of the American people.
But this increasing wealth was being distributed highly
unequally. Substantial groups of the population—slaves,
Indians, landless farmers, and many of the unskilled workers on
the fringes of the manufacturing system—shared hardly at all in
the economic growth. But even among the rest of the
population, disparities of income were growing. Merchants and
industrialists were accumulating enormous fortunes; and in the
48. best. In most parts of the North, blacks could not vote, attend
public schools, or use any of the public services available to
white residents. Even so, most African Americans preferred life
in the North, however arduous, to life in the South.
Social and Geographical Mobility
Despite the contrasts between conspicuous wealth and poverty
in antebellum America, there was relatively little overt class
conflict at this time. For one thing, life, in material Page
244terms at least, was better for most factory workers than it
had been on the farms or in Europe. Laborers also found that it
was possible to move up the economic ladder, especially when
compared to opportunities in much of Europe. A significant
amount of mobility within the working class also helped limit
discontent. A few workers—a very small number, but enough to
support the dreams of others—managed to move from poverty to
riches by dint of work, ingenuity, and luck. And a much larger
number of workers managed to move at least one notch up the
ladder—for example, becoming in the course of a lifetime a
skilled, rather than an unskilled, laborer.
More important than social mobility was geographical mobility.
Some workers saved money, bought land, and moved west to
farm it. But few urban workers, and even fewer poor ones, could
afford to make such a move. Much more common was the
movement of laborers from one industrial town to another.
These migrants, often the victims of layoffs, looked for better
opportunities elsewhere. Their search seldom led to marked
improvement in their circumstances. The rootlessness of this
large and distressed segment of the workforce made effective
organization and protest difficult.
Middle-Class Life
Despite the visibility of the very rich and the very poor in
antebellum society, the fastest-growing group in America was
the middle class. Economic development opened many more
opportunities for people to own or work in shops or businesses,
49. to engage in trade, to enter professions, and to administer
organizations. In earlier times, when landownership had been
the only real basis of wealth, society had been divided between
those with little or no land (people Europeans generally called
peasants) and a landed gentry (which in Europe usually became
an inherited aristocracy). Once commerce and industry became
a source of wealth, these rigid distinctions broke down; many
people could become prosperous without owning land, but by
providing valuable services.
Middle-class life in the antebellum years rapidly established
itself as the most influential cultural form of urban America.
Solid, substantial middle-class houses lined city streets, larger
in size and more elaborate in design than the cramped,
functional rowhouses in working-class neighborhoods—but also
far less lavish than the great houses of the very rich. Middle-
class people tended to own their homes, often for the first time.
Workers and artisans remained mostly renters.
Middle-class women usually remained in the household,
although increasingly they were also able to hire servants—
usually young, unmarried immigrant women. In an age when
doing the family’s laundry could take an entire day, one of the
aspirations of middle-class women was to escape from some of
the drudgery of housework.
New household inventions altered, and greatly improved, the
character of life in middle-class homes. Perhaps the most
important was the invention of the cast-iron stove, which began
to replace fireplaces as the principal vehicle for cooking in the
1840s. These wood- or coal-burning devices were hot, clumsy,
and dirty by later standards, but compared to the inconvenience
and danger of cooking on an open hearth, they seemed a great
luxury. Stoves gave cooks greater control over food preparation
and allowed them to cook several things at once.
Middle-class diets were changing rapidly, and not just because
of the wider range of cooking that the stove made possible. The
expansion and diversification of American agriculture and the
ability of distant farmers to ship goods to urban markets by rail
50. greatly increased the variety of food available in cities. Fruits
and vegetables were difficult to ship over long distances in an
age with little refrigeration, but families had access to a
greater Page 245variety of meats, grains, and dairy products
than in the past. A few wealthy households acquired iceboxes,
which allowed them to keep meat and dairy products fresh for
several days. Most families, however, did not yet have any
refrigeration. For them, preserving food meant curing meat with
salt and preserving fruits in sugar. Diets were generally much
heavier and starchier than they are today, and middle-class
people tended to be considerably stouter than would be
considered healthy or fashionable now.
Middle-class homes came to differentiate themselves from those
of workers and artisans in other ways as well. The spare, simple
styles of eighteenth-century homes gave way to the much more
elaborate, even baroque household styles of the Victorian era—
styles increasingly characterized by crowded, even cluttered
rooms, dark colors, lush fabrics, and heavy furniture and
draperies. Middle-class homes also became larger. It became
less common for children to share beds and for all members of a
family to sleep in the same room. Parlors and dining rooms
separate from the kitchen—once a luxury—became the norm
among the middle class. Some urban middle-class homes had
indoor plumbing and indoor toilets by the 1850s—a significant
advance over outdoor wells and privies.
The Changing Family
The new industrializing society produced profound changes in
the nature of the family. Among them was the movement of
families from farms to urban areas. Sons and daughters in urban
households were much more likely to leave the family in search
of work than they had been in the rural world. This was largely
because of the shift of income-earning work out of the home. In
the early decades of the nineteenth century, the family itself had
been the principal unit of economic activity. Now most income
earners left home each day to work in a shop, mill, or factory. A
52. industrial society, by contrast, the husband was assumed to be
the principal, usually the only, income producer. The image of
women changed from one of contributors to the family economy
to one of guardians of the “domestic virtues.” Middle-class
women learned to place a higher value on keeping a clean,
comfortable, and well-appointed home; on entertaining; and on
dressing elegantly and stylishly.
Within their own separate sphere, middle-class women began to
develop a distinctive female culture. A “lady’s” literature began
to emerge. Romantic novels written for female readers focused
on the private sphere that middle-class women now inhabited, as
did women’s magazines that focused on fashions, shopping,
homemaking, and other purely domestic concerns.
This cult of domesticity, as some scholars have called it,
provided many women greater material comfort than they had
enjoyed in the past and placed a higher value on their “female
virtues.” At the same time, it left women increasingly detached
from the public world, with fewer outlets for their interests and
energies. Except for teaching and nursing, work by women
outside the household gradually came to be seen as a lower-
class preserve.
Working-class women continued to work in factories and mills,
but under conditions far worse than those that the original, more
“respectable” women workers of Lowell and Waltham had
experienced. Domestic service became another frequent source
of female employment.
Leisure Activities
Leisure time was scarce for all but the wealthiest Americans.
Most people worked long hours every day without any vacation.
For the lucky, Sunday was a day off, set aside for rest and
religion. Not surprising, then, holidays took on a special
importance, as suggested by the strikingly elaborate
celebrations of the Fourth of July in the nineteenth century. The
celebrations were not just expressions of patriotism, but a way
of enjoying one of the few nonreligious holidays from work
53. available to most Americans.
For urban people, leisure was something to be seized in what
few free moments they had. Men gravitated to taverns for
drinking, talking, and game-playing after work. Women Page
247gathered in one another’s homes for conversation and card
games. For educated people, reading became one of the
principal leisure activities. Newspapers and magazines
proliferated rapidly, and books became staples of affluent
homes. In contrast, rural Americans, because of the seasonal
nature of farm work, enjoyed more free time in the late fall and
winter. They pursued similar past times as urbanites, but within
the home.
A public culture of leisure emerged too, especially in larger
cities. Theaters became popular and attracted audiences that
crossed class lines. Much of the popular theater of the time
consisted of melodrama based on novels or American myths.
Also popular were Shakespeare’s plays, reworked to appeal to
American audiences. Tragedies were given happy endings;
comedies were interlaced with regional humor; lines were
rewritten with American dialect; and scenes were abbreviated or
cut so that the play could be one of several in an evening’s
program. So familiar were many Shakespearean plots that
audiences took delight in seeing them parodied in productions
such as Julius Sneezer and Hamlet and Egglet.
Page 248Minstrel shows—in which white actors wearing
blackface mimicked (and ridiculed) African American culture—
became staples among white audiences. Public sporting
events—boxing, horse racing, cockfighting (already becoming
controversial), and others—often attracted considerable
audiences. Baseball, not yet organized into professional
leagues, was beginning to attract large crowds when played in
city parks or fields. A particularly exciting event in many
communities was the arrival of the circus.
Popular tastes in public spectacle tended toward the bizarre and
the fantastic. Relatively few people traveled; and in the absence
of film, radio, television, or even much photography, Americans
55. The story of agriculture in the Northeast after 1840 is one of
decline and transformation. Farmers of this section of the
country could no longer compete with the new and richer soil of
the Northwest. In 1840, the leading wheat-growing states were
New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Virginia. In 1860, they
were Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Ohio, and Michigan. Illinois,
Ohio, and Missouri also supplanted New York, Pennsylvani a,
and Virginia as growers of corn. In 1840, the most important
cattle-raising areas in the country were New York,
Pennsylvania, and New England. By the 1850s, the leading
cattle states were Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Iowa in the
Northwest and Texas in the Southwest.
Some eastern farmers responded to these changes by moving
west themselves and establishing new farms. Still others moved
to mill towns and became laborers. Some farmers, however,
remained on the land and turned to what was known as “truck
farming”—supplying food to the growing cities. They raised
vegetables or fruit and sold their produce in nearby towns.
Supplying milk, butter, and cheese to local urban markets also
attracted many farmers in central New York, southeastern
Pennsylvania, and various parts of New England.Page 249
The Old Northwest
Life was different in the states of the Old Northwest (now
known as the Midwest). In the two decades before the Civil
War, this section of the country experienced steady industrial
growth, particularly in and around Cleveland (on Lake Erie) and
Cincinnati, the center of meatpacking in the Ohio Valley.
Farther west, Chicago was emerging as the national center of
the agricultural machinery and meatpacking industries. Most of
the major industrial activities of the Old Northwest either
served agriculture (as in the case of farm machinery) or relied
on agricultural products (as in flour milling, meatpacking,
whiskey distilling, and the making of leather goods).
Some areas of the Old Northwest were not yet dominated by
whites. Indians remained the most numerous inhabitants of large
56. portions of the upper third of the Great Lakes states until after
the Civil War. In those areas, hunting and fishing, along with
some sedentary agriculture, remained the principal economic
activities.
For the settlers who populated the lands farther south, the Old
Northwest was primarily an agricultural region. Its rich lands
made farming highly lucrative. Thus the typical citizen of the
Old Northwest was not the industrial worker or poor, marginal
farmer, but the owner of a reasonably prosperous family farm.
Industrialization, in both the United States and Europe,
provided the greatest boost to agriculture. With the growth of
factories and cities in the Northeast, the domestic market for
farm goods increased dramatically. The growing national and
worldwide demand for farm products resulted in steadily rising
farm prices. For most farmers, the 1840s and early 1850s were
years of increasing prosperity.
The expansion of agricultural markets also had profound effects
on sectional alignments in the United States. The Old Northwest
sold most of its products to the Northeast and became an
important market for the products of eastern industry. A strong
economic relationship was emerging between the two sections
that was profitable to both—and that was increasing the
isolation of the South within the Union.
By 1850, the growing western white population was moving into
the prairie regions on both sides of the Mississippi. These
farmers cleared forest lands or made use of fields the Indians
had cleared many years earlier. And they developed a timber
industry to make use of the remaining forests. Although wheat
was the staple crop of the region, other crops—corn, potatoes,
and oats—and livestock were also important.
The Old Northwest also increased production by adopting new
agricultural techniques. Farmers began to cultivate new
varieties of seed, notably Mediterranean wheat, which was
hardier than the native type; and they imported better breeds of
animals, such as hogs and sheep from England and Spain. Most
important were improved tools and farm machines. The cast-
58. property as fast as he can,” said Lincoln. “When one starts poor,
as most do in the race of life, free society is such that he knows
he can better his condition; he knows that there is no fixed
condition of labor for his whole life.”
Rural Life
Life for farming people varied greatly from one region to
another. In the more densely populated areas east of the
Appalachians and in the easternmost areas of the Old
Northwest, farmers made extensive use of the institutions of
communities—churches, schools, stores, and taverns. As white
settlement moved farther west, farmers became more isolated
and had to struggle to find any occasions for contact with
people outside their own families.
Religion drew farm communities together more than any other
force in remote communities. Town or village churches were
popular meeting places, both for services and for social
events—most of them dominated by women. Even in areas with
no organized churches, farm families—and women in
particular—gathered in one another’s homes for prayer
meetings, Bible readings, and other religious activities.
Weddings, baptisms, and funerals also united communities.Page
251
But religion was only one of many reasons for interaction. Farm
people joined together frequently to share tasks such as barn
raising. Large numbers of families gathered at harvesttime to
help bring in crops, husk corn, or thresh wheat. Women came
together to share domestic tasks, holding “bees” in which
groups of women made quilts, baked goods, preserves, and other
products.
Despite the many social gatherings farm families managed to
create, they had much less contact with popular culture and
public life than people who lived in towns and cities. Most rural
people treasured their links to the outside world—letters from
relatives and friends in distant places, newspapers and
magazines from cities they had never seen, catalogs advertising
59. merchandise that their local stores never had. Yet many also
valued the relative autonomy that a farm life gave them. One
reason many rural Americans looked back nostalgically on
country life once they moved to the city was that they sensed
that in the urban world they had lost some control over the
patterns of their daily lives.CONCLUSION
Between the 1820s and the 1850s, the American economy
experienced the beginnings of an industrial revolution—a
change that transformed almost every area of life in
fundamental ways.
The American Industrial Revolution was a result of many
things: population growth, advances in transportation and
communication, new technologies that spurred the development
of factories and mass production, the recruiting of a large
industrial labor force, and the creation of corporate bodies
capable of managing large enterprises. The new economy
expanded the ranks of the wealthy, helped create a large new
middle class, and introduced high levels of inequality.
Culture in the industrializing areas of the North changed, too, as
did the structure and behavior of the family, the role of women,
and the way people used their leisure time and encountered
popular culture. The changes helped widen the gap in
experience and understanding between the generation of the
Revolution and the generation of the mid-nineteenth century.
They also helped widen the gap between North and South.
I have been reading through discussion posts and thought I
might give a few suggestions. If you have been struggling, try
using the ACE method. First give your ANSWER, then CITE
EVIDENCE, and finally EXPLAIN how that evidence supports
your answer. Here are a few examples that might help. (You do
not HAVE to use this method, but if you struggling it might be
helpful).
Question: What were the motivations for the colonists declaring
60. independence against Great Britain? Why did they feel they
needed to take this drastic step? What were the risks? What
were the repercussions?
Answer: The colonists felt that they had exhausted all other
opportunities to compromise or work with Great Britain and had
no other option but to declare independence (ANSWER). They
had made numerous attempts at asking for representation in
Parliament to give them more fair opportunities and tax laws.
They tried peacefully protesting and boycotting British goods as
a way to show their dissatisfaction with the increased taxes,
soldiers, and oppressive authority. They also wrote the Olive
Branch Petition as a formal way to ease tensions and come to a
diplomatic agreement between the colonies and Britain (CITED
EVIDENCE). However, none of these efforts were successful as
the British continued creating harsher restrictions and taxes, and
increased the military presence in the colonies to keep
rebellions down. When King George rejected the Olive Branch
Petition, the Continental Congress realized they would never get
their needs and demands met and decided independence was the
only route that could be taken (EXPLANATION).
Question: Compare the colonization of the Spanish and the
English. How were their motivations, lifestyles, and interactions
with natives different from one another?
Answer: The Spanish came to the Americas looking for
economic and religious opportunites. They did not come to
create permanent colonies, but rather to find resources and to
spread Christianity. The English were looking to create
permanent settlements in the New World. Because the Spanish
did not intend to stay permanently, those who came were mostly
men, which explains why they ending up raping and pro-
creating with natives. They also used natives for labor as part of
the encomienda system, leading to a high level of negative
interations between Spanish and Natives. On the other hand, the
English brought women and children with them as they intended
to settle and live long term in the Americas. Because they had